Obama pledges steady US hand in difficult Mideast negotiations, says both sides need a deal

By AP
Friday, September 10, 2010

Obama says he’ll stay engaged in Mideast talks

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama pledged Friday to help keep fast-track Mideast peace talks from breaking down, and said Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas knows “the window for creating a Palestinian state is closing.”

Obama said at a White House news conference that he has urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to extend a partial moratorium on Jewish homebuilding so long as negotiations, which have been resumed, are bearing fruit.

Obama dined with both leaders at the White House last week to inaugurate the latest attempt to end the conflict. He said he is certain the talks will be difficult. But he said the leaders know they need a deal, and that they need one another.

“That doesn’t mean it’s going to work,” Obama said. “Ultimately, it’s going to be up to them. We can facilitate. We can encourage. We can tell them that we will stand behind them.”

The talks are “a risk worth taking,” Obama said, because letting the conflict fester makes everyone less safe. The wars and grievances that flowed from Israel’s 1948 founding as a Jewish state have divided the Middle East and other U.S. officials have argued that the conflict begets hatred and suspicion of the U.S. as Israel’s principal ally.

Israel is motivated by its own desire for stability and secure borders, Obama suggested, and the Palestinians by the knowledge that their goal of an independent homeland could be eclipsed by time and politics.

Obama said the United States will stay involved — and that includes a visit to the region by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton next week.

The U.S.-backed talks have set a goal of establishing an independent Palestinian state within one year.

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