US Secretary of State John Kerry (left) with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Bethlehem, yesterday.
BETHLEHEM: US Secretary of State John Kerry reaffirmed yesterday Washington’s rejection of Israeli settlement activity in the occupied Palestinian territories as “illegitimate.”
“We consider now, and have always considered, the settlements to be illegitimate,” Kerry said, after talks in Bethlehem with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas focused on shoring up the peace negotiations.
“I want to make it extremely clear that at no time did the Palestinians in any way agree, as a matter of going back to the talks, that they could somehow condone or accept the settlements,” Kerry said. “That is not to say that they weren’t aware — or we weren’t aware — that there would be construction,” he added.
His remarks related to a bitter row that has erupted over Israeli moves during the past week to push ahead with construction of more than 3,700 new settler homes.
Several Israeli officials have claimed the settlement announcements were in keeping with tacit “understandings” between the two sides linked to the release last week of 26 veteran Palestinian prisoners.
Their comments sparked furious denials from the Palestinians.
“The Palestinians believe the settlements are illegal. The United Sates continue to believe the settlements are not helpful,” Kerry said. A previous round of direct talks collapsed in September 2010 in an acrimonious row over settlements, with the Palestinians refusing to negotiate while Israel builds on land they want for a future state.
After six months of shuttle diplomacy, Kerry managed to coax the two sides back to the table in late July. But already tempers are fraying, once again over Israeli construction on land seized during the 1967 Six Day War.
In Jerusalem earlier, Netanyahu had said the US-brokered negotiations had failed to make any real progress.
Speaking to reporters with a stone-faced Kerry at his side, Netanyahu accused the Palestinians of creating “artificial crises” and of trying to “run away from the historic decisions that are needed to make a genuine peace”.
The chief US diplomat, citing “difficulties” in the peace process, had said the United States was convinced that Netanyahu was also determined to pursue an end to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“As in any negotiation there will be moments of up and moments of down, and it goes back and forth,” Kerry said. Kerry, whose shuttle diplomacy helped to revive the talks last July after a three-year break, has set a nine-month schedule for an agreement, despite widespread scepticism. Faced with grim Israeli and Palestinian assessments of progress in the talks, Kerry also appeared to slap down Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and warmly endorsed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s commitment to seeking a two-state solution.
Agencies