Clinton confident both sides will return to the negotiating table
Ramallah, West Bank: The Palestinians are seeking a map from the United States showing where Israel sees its final borders and making clear whether they include Palestinian land and homes, an official said on Wednesday.
Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) official Yasser Abed Rabbo was responding to a US call for the Palestinians to present their own ideas in response to an Israeli proposal they recognise Israel as a Jewish state in return for curbs on colony building — a declaration they have long opposed.
"What is required from the American administration and Israel is that they present us with the map of the state of Israel that they want us to recognise," Abed Rabbo told Reuters.
"Is this map on the '67 borders or does it include Palestinian land and the homes we live in?" he said, referring to the year when Israel captured the West Bank and Gaza Strip in a Middle East war.
The colony issue has derailed US-backed peace talks which began on September 2.
Visiting Kosovo, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sounded an optimistic note.
"I am personally convinced that both leaders, [Israeli] Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu and [Palestinian] President [Mahmoud] Abbas, very much see it as in their respective interest to return to and proceed with direct negotiations," she said.
The Palestinians say they will not resume the US-backed talks until Israel halts colony building on occupied land where they aim to found a state. An Israeli freeze on new home building in the occupied West Bank expired on September 26.
Netanyahu said on Monday he would be willing to request another freeze from his cabinet if the Palestinians recognised Israel as a Jewish state.
Trust-building measures
He said it would be a "trust-building step", while some Palestinian and Israeli commentators questioned whether the proposal was only a ploy to try to shift blame onto the Palestinians should the peace process collapse.
The Palestinians ruled out the idea — something they see as a major concession that would be tantamount to political suicide for a leadership whose credibility has already been badly damaged by the failure of past peace talks.
On Tuesday, US State Department spokesman P. J. Crowley said Netanyahu had "offered his thoughts on both what he's willing to contribute to the process, and what he thinks he needs for his people out of the process".
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