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Tags: US | Obama | Israel

Obama Says There's Hope for Middle East Peace

Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:21 PM EDT

President Barack Obama says there's hope for peace between Israel and the Palestinians, but that doesn't mean he's "blindly optimistic." The comments came as his administration and a key Arab ally stepped up calls for the two sides to return to direct negotiations.

In an interview taped Wednesday for Israeli television, Obama said Israel is right to be skeptical about the peace process. But he noted that many people thought the founding of Israel was impossible, so its very existence should be "a great source of hope."

The interview followed a White House meeting on Tuesday between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at which the two leaders expressed support for upgrading the current indirect Israeli-Palestinian talks that are being mediated by U.S. peace envoy George Mitchell. The Palestinians demand that Israel freeze settlement construction before direct talks can proceed, however.

Obama and Netanyahu said that the two sides should begin speaking directly to each other.

That sentiment was echoed by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh, whose country is deemed critical to the peace process.

"Moving to direct talks as soon as possible is in the interests of the Israelis, the Palestinians, the region and the world," Clinton told reporters after meeting Judeh at the State Department. "The sooner that the Israelis and the Palestinians get into direct negotiations, the sooner they can actually make decisions."

"Direct talks ... must resume quickly," Judeh said, adding that the negotiations must "be timebound, benchmarked and conducted in good faith." He said that once direct talks begin, Arab nations will start to provide tangible support for the peace process.

Earlier in Cairo, however, the head of the Arab League said that indirect talks between Israel and the Palestinians are failing and there is a little chance for a shift to direct negotiations. Amr Moussa said senior Arab diplomats will meet July 29 to evaluate the results of the indirect talks, which started in May.

In his Israeli television interview, Obama also recalled visiting Jerusalem before he became president. He described wandering anonymously through the Old City as "a profound pleasure" that he's too well-known to enjoy now.

Obama laughed about leaving a prayer at the Western Wall during his most recent visit, only to have someone remove it and print it in a newspaper.

© Copyright 2023 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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President Barack Obama says there's hope for peace between Israel and the Palestinians, but that doesn't mean he's blindly optimistic. The comments came as his administration and a key Arab ally stepped up calls for the two sides to return to direct negotiations.In an...
US,Obama,Israel
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2010-21-08
Thursday, 08 July 2010 02:21 PM
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