Monday, 19 September 2011

Associated Press Diplomats scramble ahead of Palestinian UN bid By BRADLEY KLAPPER, Associated Press Monday, September 19, 2011 (page 1 of 2) Single pageSingle Page Print E-mail Share Comments (4) Font | Size: 9 Majdi Mohammed / AP Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas gestures and the end of his speech in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Friday, Sept. 16, 2011. Abbas said Friday he would ask the Security Council next week to accept the Palestinians as full members at the United Nations. Images Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas gestures and the end ...Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures during...In this photo taken Friday, Sept. 16, 2011, President Bar... View All Images (13) More News Asian American SF political clout grows 09.19.11 Grace Crunican, BART chief, would meet protesters 09.19.11 Caldecott Tunnel workers dig toward tomorrow 09.19.11 (09-19) 01:02 PDT NEW YORK, (AP) -- With the future of the Middle East in the balance, the United States and Europe are scrambling for a way to avoid a jarring showdown over whether to admit an independent Palestine as a new United Nations member. Instead, they are trying to guide Israel and the Palestinians back into the tough bargaining on a long-sought peace agreement. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton met Sunday in New York and discussed the current trajectory, in which the Palestinian plan to gain statehood and membership at the U.N. would run headfirst into an American veto in the Security Council, and possible Israeli recriminations. Yet there was no apparent and immediate solution to the many problems that have hindered Mideast peace efforts for months. Diplomats were working feverishly as part of an increasingly desperate effort to guide the two parties back into direct negotiations, but were tight-lipped on whether the slim chances for a breakthrough were improving. "We are meeting to talk about the way forward," Clinton said as she shook hands with Ashton in a New York hotel. She declined to say if mediators were making progress. The Palestinians are frustrated by their inability to win from Israel concessions such as a freeze on settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. And with violence out of the question and bilateral talks with Israel failing, they see the U.N. route as the only viable route for progress in the short term. To address the Palestinian concerns, Western officials were discussing the possibility of including some timeframes, however vague, in any statement put out by the Mideast peace mediators — the U.S., EU, U.N. and Russia — known as the Quartet, officials said. These would focus on the restart of Israeli-Palestinian talks and signs of tangible progress. Envoys from all four gathered Sunday in New York and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon met with Quartet envoy Tony Blair. A further meeting of Quartet officials was planned for Monday, officials said, with Ashton possibly presenting some ideas to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on the same day. The timeframes wouldn't be deadlines, as such, but would seem to address the Palestinian desire to see quick action. The offer would come with an unchanged message that Washington would veto a Palestinian bid at the Security Council for U.N. recognition and membership, but at the very least it would represent a dignity-saving compromise for Abbas' U.S.-backed government. The alternative concern is that an embarrassment for his government would embolden Hamas, which the U.S. and Israel consider a terrorist organization and which would be far less eager to negotiate a two-state settlement with the Jewish nation. The irony is that only 12 months ago, President Barack Obama said he wanted the U.N. to be welcoming Palestine as its newest member this year. But talks broke down long ago, and the U.S. is in the unenviable position of leading the opposition to something it actually supports, fearful a Palestinian victory might cause a debilitating rift with Israel and set the talks back further. American officials were working to secure additional opposition to recognition, officials said. Without nine affirmative votes in the 15-member Council, the Palestinian resolution would fail and Washington wouldn't have to act alone. U.S. officials believe six other members may vote against or abstain, meaning the Palestinians would fall short. That tally could not be immediately confirmed. Heading off or watering down the Palestinian resolution had been the goal of international diplomats. If they can accomplish that, they hope to parlay it into a meeting between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders where the two sides would re-launch negotiations. But the Palestinians have refused to back down and give up the little leverage they hope to win. 1 | 2 | Next Page » Print E-mail Share 9 We Recommend Remains found may be missing nurse Boys, 16, plead not guilty to San Diego park rapes Toddler run over and killed by mom's SUV Obama to offer his own debt reduction package Palestinians say they won't back down on U.N. vote 'Happy Gilmore' actress Frances Bay dies at 95 From Around the Web News of the World Emails Show Paper ‘Bought’… (CSO) Iran Bans Foreign Cooking Shows (The Daily Meal) The World's Most Dangerous Countries (Travel + Leisure) 10 Most Depressing Careers (Health.com) Waitress scams bad tippers (BankRate.com) [What's this?] Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/09/18/national/w020241D85.DTL#ixzz1YP8YCqL3

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