- Join the France 24 community here
- Log in
Latest update: 24/09/2011
- Ban Ki-moon - Catherine Ashton - European Union - Hillary Clinton - Israeli-Palestinian conflict - Mahmoud Abbas - Sergei Lavrov - United Nations
Mideast quartet envoys call for peace deal by 2012
Envoys from the Mideast diplomatic quartet – comprising the US, the UN, Russia and the EU – called Friday for Israel and the Palestinians to launch a new round of direct peace talks aiming for a deal by the end of 2012.
By News Wires (text)
AFP - The United States and other world powers called Friday for the Palestinians and Israel to resume direct peace talks within a month and commit to seeking a deal by the end of 2012.
The Quartet of the United States, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations acted after Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas formally submitted his request to the United Nations for Palestine to be admitted as a full member.
The United States has vowed to veto the unilateral bid at the UN Security Council, arguing that the resumption of direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians is the only real path to peace and statehood.
US-brokered talks stalled a year ago when Israel failed to renew a partial freeze on settlement construction in the occupied West Bank, but the Quartet urged both sides Friday to resume negotiations and plotted out a path forward.
"We urge both parties to take advantage of this opportunity to get back to talks," US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told reporters after talks with her Quartet partners on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
A senior Israeli official told AFP on condition of anonymity that his side was "currently studying the statement. We are ready to resume the negotiations."
Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat meanwhile urged Israel to "seize" the Quartet offer, telling AFP the Palestinians were "ready to assume our responsibilities" based on a previous Quartet blueprint and international law.
"But Israel needs to assume its own and end settlement activity" in the occupied West Bank, he added.
Urging both sides only to "refrain from provocative actions," the Quartet statement did not explicitly call for a halt to Israeli settlements, which the Palestinians have set as a condition for resuming talks.
Nor did it clearly call for a Palestinian state based on the boundaries that existed before the 1967 war -- which would fulfill the Palestinian desire for a state in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip with east Jerusalem as its capital.
However, it reaffirmed the Quartet's support for US President Barack Obama's "vision" of peace, which called for a deal along the pre-1967 boundaries, albeit with land swaps to allow for Israel to keep some settlements.
The statement set down a broad timetable for negotiations.
"Within a month there will be a preparatory meeting between the parties to agree an agenda and method of proceeding in the negotiation," it said.
"At that meeting there will be a commitment by both sides that the objective of any negotiation is to reach an agreement within a timeframe agreed to by the parties but not longer than the end of 2012."
Israelis and Palestinians must then produce "comprehensive proposals within three months on territory and security," and they should achieve "substantial progress" within six months, it said.
The Quartet will convene an international conference in Moscow, "at an appropriate time," aimed at giving a boost to tackling those final status issues.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been discussing Israeli security arrangements for the West Bank with US administration officials, a source close to the talks said.
The four powers also set forth plans for an international donors conference to provide "full and sustained support to the Palestinian Authority" to help it build the institutions for a state.
The statement by the Quartet, whose envoys met intensively all week, emerged following talks involving Clinton, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
Quartet representative Tony Blair, who has also been involved in the talks, said the proposal was "the only way in the end we deal with the difficulties around the table and in negotiations."
Announcing the Quartet statement, Ashton said "if ever there was a time to resolve this conflict it is now."
"It is now because Israel worries about its security, because the people of Palestine have waited long for their country," she told reporters.
In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said: "The first stone (has been laid) for new negotiations."
A French Foreign Ministry statement said the Quartet action "is a step in the right direction, which is a restarting of negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians."
Related Content
Breaking news from the MIDDLE EAST




























Comments (6)
What can I do for Israel today
Is this a Zionist board?
@joseph john walker "moron. brainless. retard"
You sound like a typical american zionist that trawls the boards looks to hammer down anyone that thinks Israel in a terror state. look at the map of 1947 to now you moron. Where did you think you got all that land from. Any chance you will give you home in the good old usa back to the american indians? Moron, retard, brainless. Your words. No doubt a nice person that drinks too much Johnnie Walker.
Quartet wants peace deal
That's a joke! Who cares what the Quartet wants. It's what Israel wants that counts and they don't want one. So live with it!
Palestine 194
How much time needed by Palestinians and Israelis to negotiate for peace? But I've found that this question will be futile as long as both parties don't trust each other and it seems to me that there are no real negotiations as long as it lasted for more than twenty years without leading to peace, it's a big game between the Israeli and Palestinian Governments and nobody suffers from this game but Isreali and Palestinian peoples who live in that part of the Earth.
That Israel is responsible for more than the failure of the peace process, because the party stronger and more capable against the Palestinians. I believe that the invitation of Israel to return to negotiations between unequal parties blagdoi ... I find that the desire of the Palestinians to declare their own State in the United Nations is a good opportunity and a real step to peace serves both Israel and Palestine ... Since all the outstanding problems between the two parties will be resolved in a more responsible and serious, as two neighboring nations, are trying to maintain normal relations ... Israel would gain more of a Palestinian State because it will be the gate to the Arab and Muslim world.
greed is blind
From years of just taking and taking Israel has brought it upon its self . The rest of the world now sees it will never give anything back that its taken from others. Yet it demands more and more.
Palistinian state
When those Palistinian morons get educated,Then thay should come back to the negioatiating table.And you retards in broadcasting and media in the west,and those tent dwellers and goat herders who now have modern technology but still brainless ,The land was called Judah long before it was ever called Palistine.
Post new comment