Tampilkan postingan dengan label Benjamin Netanyahu. Tampilkan semua postingan
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Maret 23, 2011

Netanyahu, Abbas May Cross Paths in Moscow as Russia Seeks Role

File picture : Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas



March 23, 2011 (KATAKAMI.COM / Bloomberg) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to Moscow today, where he will cross paths with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas as they consult separately with a Russian leadership looking to insert itself into Middle East peacemaking.

As reported by Bloomberg on Wednesday, violence has been escalating between Israel and the Hamas- controlled Gaza Strip. Israeli soldiers yesterday fired mortar shells into Gaza killing four teenagers playing soccer, and an air strike left three other people dead in a separate incident, a Gaza health official said.

Israeli-Palestinian peace talks stalled in September after Netanyahu refused to extend a 10-month partial construction freeze in West Bank settlements. Abbas has said he won’t negotiate with Israel while the building continues.

There is “nothing planned in terms of a meeting between Abbas and Netanyahu in Moscow,” Palestinian Liberation Organization executive committee member Hanan Ashrawi said in a phone interview, adding that the timing of the visits likely wasn’t coincidental.

“The Russians have always expressed the desire to convene an international conference on the Israel-Palestinian front, and I wouldn’t be surprised if this is what they are pushing now,” Ashrawi said.

‘Act with Determination’

Netanyahu said he regrets that innocent civilians were killed in the violence yesterday and pinned blame on Hamas, which he said launched rockets at Israel while using civilians as a human shield.

“Israel has no intention of bringing about a deterioration in the situation,” Netanyahu said in an e-mailed statement. “At the same time, the Israeli military will act with determination to protect Israel’s civilians.”

The Israeli army said in a statement that both of the strikes in Gaza were aimed at Palestinians firing mortar shells and rockets at southern Israel.

A group of masked militants fired mortar shells at Israel from near a playground where teenagers were playing soccer, said 28-year-old Mohammed, an eyewitness who asked that his full name be withheld for fear of reprisal. He said minutes after the mortars were fired the Israelis shot back.

Hamas seized control of Gaza in 2007, ending a partnership government with Abbas’s Fatah after winning parliamentary elections the previous year. Hamas is considered a terrorist organization by Israel, the European Union and the U.S.

At least 19 Gazans have been injured in the current round of violence, according to Adham Abu Selmeya, chief of emergency services in Gaza, who confirmed yesterday’s deaths. He said an eighth man was clinically dead from Israeli shelling.

Drive to Mediate

Abbas met yesterday with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who told reporters afterwards he was concerned about peace efforts in the wake of continuing turmoil in the region, according to the Kremlin. Medvedev, on a visit to Jericho in January, renewed a call Russia first made last year for a Middle East peace conference to be held in Russia.

“Moscow has long considered itself one of the countries in the front line to mediate the Palestinian-Israeli conflict,” said Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center. “The fact that Moscow is inviting both sides no doubt demonstrates its drive to be a mediator.”

Netanyahu is scheduled to meet Medvedev, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov tomorrow to discuss the peace process, Iran, changes going on in the region, bi-lateral relations and economic cooperation, an Israeli official said, speaking anonymously because he wasn’t authorized to speak on the record.

Cruise Missiles

Israel’s relations with Russia have been strained by Moscow’s arm sales to its enemies, including Syria and Iran. Israel protested Russia’s announced sale last September of anti- ship Yakhont cruise missiles worth more than $300 million sales to Syria. Russia last year scrapped an $800 million delivery of S-300 air defense systems to Iran in compliance with U.N.- imposed international sanctions.

Israel “has not much leverage” to influence Russian arms sales, said Amnon Sella, a Russian-studies expert at Israel’s Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, near Tel Aviv. “With the Middle East in upheaval, it is very important for Russia to maintain its position in the region, and one of the ways it does so is through the sale of weapons systems.”   (*)

Januari 16, 2011

PM Netanyahu's Remarks at the Start of the Weekly Cabinet Meeting

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem January 16, 2011.





Jan 16, 2011 (KATAKAMI / PRIME MINISTER'S OFFICE) --- Following are Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's remarks at the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting today:


"I would like to direct your attention to the book of Government working plans.  It seems to me that this is the first time that the Government has put its goals, the plans of every ministry, in a book.  The only way to get anywhere is to know where you are going.  Here, we are doing something that involves a certain degree of daring because we are writing, in the most measurable way possible, what we want to achieve in every ministry.  I will request that the ministries present their working plans and goals to us.  I have done so in my various Government posts, especially as Finance Minister.  We measure the successes in relation to the goals.  I am pleased to see this attitude spread to other ministries, including Transportation, Education, Communications, etc., and to every course of action that we decide upon.  We want to see clear results; therefore, the Government sets goals and – publicly and transparently – measures their achievement.  I think that this is a change of attitude regarding the work ethic at the ministries.  I hope that this is the start of a long tradition.

One of our goals is to achieve peace and security with our neighbors in the region.  The region in which we live is unstable.  Everyone sees this today.  We see this at several points throughout the Middle East.  I would say that there is a great island of instability in the geographic expanse in which we live.  We hope that stability will be restored.  We hope that there will be quiet and security.  We are monitoring developments.  If there is one conclusion, one clear lesson that arises from all that we see around us, it is that we need to lay the foundations of security in any agreement that we make.  We cannot simply say 'We are signing a peace agreement', close our eyes and say 'We did it' because we do not know with any clarity that the peace will indeed be honored.  We would increase any agreement's chances of being honored by including within it stable and solid security arrangements.

But there is another reason why we insist on peace agreements with a very strong security infrastructure and this is because peace can unravel.  It could be that there are regime, and other, changes that may not be expected today, but which could happen tomorrow.  Therefore, this Government's policy is to bind peace and security together because security ensures peace and protects the state of Israel should it unravel.

Today, we submit for Cabinet approval the appointment of Yohanan Danino as the next Inspector-General of the Israel Police.  Yohanan has the vast experience of 28 years of excellent service in the Israel Police.  He is creative; he is a leader.  I think that he could move the Israel Police forward in enforcing the rule of law, fighting crime and strengthening Israelis' personal security.  He will create not just a sense of security, but a more secure reality with everything regarding the Israel Police.

Today, we will discuss the State of Israel's membership in UN WOMEN.  I would like to commend Deputy Minister Gila Gamliel, who will present the issue; she is also leading it.  We are one of the leading countries in the world in advancing the status of women.  In recent weeks, we passed a series of laws increasing the representation of women in public companies, encouraging the employment of mothers, etc.  I note this because in our region there is at least one country in which women are stoned and there is a general problem of women's rights, of human rights in general and those of minorities in particular; not in the State of Israel.  Whoever talks about us as an exceptional country is right, we are very exceptional in this regard.  We are also an island of stability, rights and progress that others could learn from." (*)

Januari 13, 2011

PM Netanyahu’s Annual Meeting with Members of the International Press in Israel

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a statement to members of the foreign press in Jerusalem, Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2011. Netanyahu insists that Iran will not stop its nuclear program unless economic sanctions are backed with a "credible military option." Netanyahu says the only time the Iranians stopped their nuclear development when they thought they were threatened with a military strike. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
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January 11 ( KATAKAMI / PRIME MINISTER’S OFFICE) —  Full transcript :
I would like to take your questions, but before I do that, I’d like to review the main events of last year.  We met a year ago when we spoke among other things, about the need to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons and about my hope to advance the peace process. So before I take your questions, let me briefly take stock of these two issues.
2009 was a year in which Iran was unmasked and that unmasking continued in 2010.  People witnessed the brutal nature of this regime in the wake of its elections and Iran was caught red-handed building a nuclear facility, a secret nuclear facility in Qom.  And of course I think that in the parting year, people also understood the danger that such a regime would pose if it possessed nuclear weapons.  I think that’s become part of the international understanding of very broad segments of the world community.
Now 2010 was the year in which the international community began to take action based on this understanding.  The first significant action was the sanctions of the UN Security Council led by the United States and I think President Obama and Secretary Clinton should be congratulated for pushing this as well as advancing sanctions outside the United Nations – tougher sanctions – by the US, by the Europeans and by others.  And there’s no question that these questions have put real economic pressure on Iran.  They’ve put significant pressure on the banking system; they forced Iran to cut subsidies.  I can tell you, I cut subsidies as Finance Minister.  It’s not an easy thing to do.
And there’s no question that all these things have caused hardship, but they have not in any way altered Iran’s determination to pursue its nuclear program.  They’re determined to move ahead despite every difficulty, every obstacle, every setback to create nuclear weapons.  And since the purpose of the sanctions is to change that determination, those sanctions have not yet achieved their objective.  So I think they should be strictly enforced and I think they should be materially strengthened.
Now I said two months ago that the only chance that these sanctions would achieve their objectives would be to couple them with an understanding from Iran that no matter what, they’ll be followed – that is if they don’t achieve their goal they’ll be followed by a credible military option.  I said that because in the many years that I’ve been talking about this and that Iran has been pursuing its nuclear weapons program, there was only one respite, there was a momentary pause, in 2003 when Iran thought that there was a credible military option from the United States, it temporarily suspended its nuclear weapons program. I believe that today the same is true. They will only stop going through the hardship of economic pain and all the dislocations that the sanctions cause in Iran if they thought it was useless, if they thought that there would be this credible military option at the end of the tunnel, so to speak.
So I think this is a prerequisite to make it clear and the paradox is that if there is a credible military option, you won’t have to use it.
2010 was also the year of WikiLeaks, and you’ve heard about that. The WikiLeaks exposed the three main concerns of most, if not all, of the governments in this region. The first concern is Iran; the second concern is Iran; and the third concern is Iran. That’s not to say that they don’t want to see the advance in the peace process – they do; that they’re not concerned about the Arab-Israeli peace – they are. But they’re very much concerned that all of this would come to naught, and in fact their own interests (I’m speaking diplomatically now) would be tremendously jeopardized unless the Iranian nuclear program is stopped. Peace would be stopped and vital interests of just about every government in the region would be threatened.
So this information that came out, which wasn’t new to us, but I suppose was new to the world, refuted the conventional wisdom that the main concern of the governments in this region was the peace process. It certainly refuted the conventional wisdom that the only way to win backing for substantive, tough action against Iran from the governments in this region was to advance the peace process.
The peace process should be advanced for its own right. It should be advanced because we want to put an end to this conflict. It should be advanced because we owe it to our children and to the children of the Palestinians and others in this region to have peace. Anybody who’s been in the opposite of peace, in battle and in war, and knows the terrible suffering that we experience in war, understands and cherishes peace.
Peace should be pursued in its own right. But the pursuit of the peace process does not materially change people’s conception that Iran has to be stopped for the sake of peace and for the sake of vital interests of many governments in this area.
Now, about peace: I predict that the coming year will expose another central truth. Just as 2010 brought the truth about Iran and this region out to light, I think that 2011 will bring about another truth about who is seriously interested in peace in this region.
All of you know the conventional wisdom. It goes like this: the Palestinian Authority wants peace, but they may be too weak or they lack the capacity to do so, but they want to reach a peace agreement; and Israel – this narrative goes – does not want peace. It falsely accuses my government, or myself, or even the Israeli public (I read that too) of not being seriously interested in peace.
You have 60,000 rockets pointed on your cities, on your house. You have a lot of chutzpa to say to people that the Israeli people don’t want peace. I don’t think there’s any people in the world that want peace more, pray for peace, yearn for peace, hope for peace more than the Israeli people. So this is the conventional wisdom.
I want to challenge it with some very concrete facts from this past year. Well, one before that year. When my government was established we did the following: first of all we immediately called for direct peace negotiations. Secondly, we removed hundreds of roadblocks and checkpoints to facilitate the impressive growth of the Palestinian economy. Third, I gave the Bar Ilan Speech that called for a peace of two states for two peoples. Then we did a fourth thing, which was the unprecedented freeze of new construction in the settlements. No government did this before. And fifth, something you may not be aware of, some of you might know it but most of you don’t, we were willing to extend another three months and actually come to an agreement with the US about the conditions for such an extended freeze, another 90 days.
The reason it didn’t take place was not that we hadn’t come to an agreement with the United States. It’s that the United States decided – I think in a large part in good measure – that what would happen is we’d spend a lot of political capital to put forward this 90-day freeze. It’s not clear if they’d bring in the Palestinians and if they did, on day one of the 90 days they’d be discussing, the Palestinians, about their requirement for a freeze on day 91 and that would obviate all the serious discussion about the real issues of peace that are required.
So the United States chose not to move in this path, to go to another path. But it is a fact that we were willing to do these five things that I’ve just articulated, and some of them without precedent.
While we did these five things, this is what the Palestinians did: they refused to negotiate for the first time since the Oslo process began 18 years ago. They placed a settlement freeze as a precondition for negotiations. They wasted nine months before coming to the talks and then they left the talks after three weeks and all of six hours of direct negotiations.
These are the facts. Some may distort them; some may ignore them, but they still remain the facts.
There are many skeptics maybe among you and among the Israeli public and even among my government from across the spectrum who doubt that the Palestinians want to reach an agreement. You know, I can understand that skepticism after the previous efforts of very generous governments in 2000 at Camp David, and in 2008, they walked away from these agreements and I suppose there’s reason for skepticism.
But here’s the important point. My coalition, in no way prevented me from making these unprecedented steps towards peace. They didn’t stop me, they joined me. It’s an important point to make that what is preventing the advent of peace negotiations is that the Palestinians are doing everything in their power to avoid them.
This is a simple truth. So, no matter what the conventional wisdom the truth is that I want peace, and despite all the difficulties I’m determined to pursue it.
Israel has a peculiar electoral system. It makes for, how should I say it, interesting governance. No-one’s smiling, even. But the policy is set by the prime minister. The concrete steps that we take are the steps brought by the prime minister, and approved by the cabinet.
I’ve made it clear and I’ll make it clear again today that no coalition considerations will prevent me from pursuing a peace that I believe in. I’ll tell you something else. I think that if I bring a peace agreement, which means that I believe in the agreement that I will sign, I think that I will bring the support of the Israeli public. I don’t think, I know that. So I think the Palestinians are missing out on something very important.
I hate to use clichés.  I try to avoid them as best as I can.  But this is a cliché that I have to use.  The Palestinians never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
They’re not going to get an imposed settlement from the outside.  It doesn’t work.  There is no short-cut to negotiations.  The only way you get peace is negotiating peace.  The only government that I believe that can actually deliver a peace agreement because it will be trusted by the Israeli people to provide the elements of security and recognition that are so required, are so central to have a real peace, the only government that can do that is my government.  And I think I’m the only prime minister who can deliver that.
The Palestinians are walking away from peace because they’re walking away from the negotiation.  You know, they’re flying out to the world: South America, Asia, the far corners of the world.  Save a lot of air fuel, a lot of gas by just going ten minutes, coming here.  You want to negotiate peace, sit down and negotiate.  You want to talk peace, sit down and talk.  You want to conclude peace, sit down and let the white smoke come out – get a negotiation and get a conclusion.  There is no other way to achieve peace.  And I hope that, I hope they’ll change their mind – not only their tactics, but their substantive position.
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he addresses members of the foreign media during a reception in Jerusalem January 11, 2011. Only the convincing threat of military action headed by the United States will persuade Iran to drop plans to build an atomic bomb, Netanyahu said on Tuesday. REUTERS/Baz Ratner
You know that at the Bar Ilan speech that I gave, I laid out the fundamental elements of a peace which is a demilitarized Palestinian state that recognizes the Jewish nation-State of Israel.  But what I hear the PA say are the three no’s.  No to a Jewish State.  I think they said they wouldn’t recognize the Jewish State for a thousand years.  That is not a phrase that resonates with Jews, I can tell you.  And the second no was no to any compromise on refugees.  I recently read an interesting article in the Guardian by the Palestinian negotiator.
And the third no is no to any Israeli presence in the Jordon Valley for any reasonable period of time.  This is absolutely required for demilitarization to take place because you know we left Lebanon, Hezbollah came in.  We left Gaza, and there was an Egyptian army that was there and is still there, and Iran walked in.  And we need to have some safeguards that we don’t repeat this a third time, because obviously the security of the nation is at stake, and the security of our people, the security of peace, is at stake.  We can’t allow this to happen a third time and I believe that security arrangements can be modified over time.  They can be tested, but they must include the one force that will not walk away, and the one force that will do the job.
How we do it and what precise configuration is something to be negotiated.  But to say automatically that we cannot have an Israeli presence in the Jordon Valley, is to go against any possible, any realistic arrangement that can provide demilitarization and demilitarization and security arrangements are the key – the key to keep the peace, that’s obvious.  And it may not be obvious to some of you, because you hear all the time a contrary statement that says, “well, what will keep the peace is the peace.” What will keep the peace and what will give the security to the peace is the actual signing of the peace.  It’ll certainly contribute to that effect.  It doesn’t guarantee it.
There’s a country with which we had tremendously close relations.  We had the exchange of the leaderships; there were exchanges between our security forces; economic trade, and that country is called Iran.  And that changed overnight.  There’s another country with which we had flowering peaceful relations: meeting of leaders; joint military exercises; 400,000 Israeli tourists a year – that country is called Turkey.  And I still hope we can arrest the slide in the relationship between Turkey and Israel.  It wasn’t eroded by our choice.
The conclusion of a formal peace doesn’t guarantee the continuation of the peace. But the security arrangements that are there, they help buttress the peace and they also protect us in case peace unravels, in case Iran walks in or tries to walk in.
This is why the elements of security, alongside the elements of recognition, are absolutely essential to the achievement of peace.
This is what I hope to discuss with Abu Mazen, with President Abbas. I want to sit down with him. These are our concerns. I know he has his concerns. I’m prepared to discuss this, directly. We don’t have to go to another place. We can sit down right here. This is what people do if they actually want to make peace.
I’m not putting these issues as preconditions for negotiations. I have no preconditions for negotiations. The only precondition for negotiation is negotiation. It’s the only one.
So I hope the Palestinians are not putting these three no’s as a substantive opposition. I hope it’s a tactical move. But if they’re prepared to actually engage in substantive negotiation, if they’re prepared to negotiate, then I think that they will find that this government – my government, this prime minister – me, that I’m prepared and able to achieve an historic peace which they need, I believe, as much as we do.
In any case, I’ll tell you that in 2011, everyone, I believe, will come out of that year knowing who really wants peace. We’ll meet here in a year and I think you’ll see that I’m right.
If you have questions, ask them.
Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the annual meeting of the Foreign Press in Jerusalem January 11, 2011. (Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP/Getty Images)
Crispian Balmer, Reuters: Thank you. Going back to the question of Iran, do you agree with the assessment of the outgoing Mossad Chief that Iran now won’t or can’t get its nuclear bomb before 2015.  And then you were talking about the need for a credible military threat.  Don’t you think that this sort of comments that we’ve been hearing from senior Israeli security officials including the Mossad Chief who urged count cautioned against preemptive attacks, -don’t you think that makes such a threat from Israel evaporate basically? Thank you.
PM Netanyahu: Well, I think that intelligence estimates are exactly that, they’re estimates.  They range from best case to worst case possibilities and there’s quite a range there.  I think there’s room for some differing assessments.  But there’s no debate about three things.  First, that the goal of Iran is to develop nuclear weapons.  Not nuclear material, not isotopes for medical treatment.  The goal is to get nuclear weapons.
The second is that they’re amassing the material for that purpose.  They’ve amassed now the significant amount of LEU, low-enriched uranium, and they’re enriching to a higher level this material as well.
The third thing that there’s no question about is that they are a brutal regime and very dangerous.  So I think that the conclusion that is led is that you have to ratchet up the pressure.  And as I said, I don’t think that this pressure will be sufficient to change course, to have this regime change course without a credible military option that is put before them by the international community led by the United States.
Harriet Sherwood, the Guardian: Thank you, Prime Minister, Tzipi Livni yesterday said that there was an evil spirit sweeping across Israel.  Today she’s accused the government of trying to silence opposition, and said the government is hurting the State of Israel.  She’s largely referring to policies being pushed by your foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman and his party.  Are you comfortable with the policies of your key coalition partner and are you worried that he and his party are doing more to delegitimize Israel in the eyes of the world than those who accuse us of doing the very same thing?
PM Netanyahu: Let me answer two parts of that question.  First is the assumption that Israel is moving towards a bad place.  You have to ask where is the government going because we are committed and I’m committed to Israel as a Jewish and democratic state with its democratic values.  When I see, for example, some calls from a handful of individuals, in this case some rabbis who said don’t sell land or don’t sell property, real estate to Israel’s Arab citizens, I was outraged, I just spoke out directly and I attacked it.  And I think that shows it’s what the government does. It’s the values that we have that I think are important.
Now since you asked that question, I want to ask you a question.  Do you think it’s pertinent that ten minutes from here there’s a government decree that says that if you sell land to Jews that’s punishable by death.  Do you think that’s something worthy of reporting?  Can I ask you a question?  How many of you have reported that? Anyone can raise their hands?  Wow! I’m impressed.  Three, four, five. Five!  We’re doing well.  Can we reach 10%?
You think that’s worthy of reporting?  If you want to assume then ask the question where do you have a society in which the norms are democratic norms that respect the rights of all the citizens of any creed, of any faith, to equal treatment under the law and equal treatment beyond the law.  That’s here in Israel.  That’s the only place. And I give you this example of selling… This was one of the most egregious points. Selling land, or selling an apartment or a house to an Arab? Somebody says you shouldn’t do that even though they’re well within their rights.  Somebody is suggesting that and I as the Prime Minister of Israel forcefully attacked that, immediately.
Yet 10 minutes from here in the Palestinian Authority in Ramallah, there is a law, a decree that says that if you sell land to Jews it’s punishable by death.  That’s worthy of your reporting.  It tells a lot about this asymmetry.  Israel is decried, Israel is attacked, Israel is criticized when it’s really a democratic country that upholds the rights of everyone, of all its citizens, of Jews and Arabs, Muslims, Christians, Druze, women, gays, minorities.  We stand up for those rights.  We have a legal system that upholds them and we have a governmental system that upholds them.
Yet right across here, there’s something else. It’s not as bad as Hamas, It’s not as bad as Iran, but it’s bad.  Because you have laws that say that you will sentence to death somebody who sells a piece of property to Jews.  I urge you to ask those questions in Ramallah, because I think you’ll be making a contribution for peace.
You asked me about the Foreign Minister.  As I said, we have a peculiar political system.  It’s coalition system.  So the Prime Minister is from the Likud, myself. The defense Minister is from Labor, the Foreign Minister is from Yisrael Beitaynu and we have different points of view.  We coalesce on the main policy actions.  We disagree on some things, we agree on others.  We have to agree in the end on the conduct of policy.  I can appreciate quite a few things that the foreign Minister has done, especially in opening up relations, broadening relations is the word I would use, with Eastern Europe, Russia, the Former Soviet Union, the Balkans and others.
But I don’t appreciate, and I told him this personally yesterday, I don’t appreciate his criticism of my colleagues, the Likud ministers.  Because I don’t think there’s anyone that can teach them patriotism, concern for Israel’s security or the standards of Israeli democracy.  The Likud is a national party and we’re committed to a democratic Israel, democratic values.  And I want to assure you the Likud will stay that way, and I also want to assure you that the government will stay that way. (*)

Januari 04, 2011

PM Netanyahu: Israel agreed to new settlement freeze, but U.S. retracted offer


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a meeting with the Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee at the Knesset (Israeli parliament) in Jerusalem on January 3, 2011. (Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP/Getty Images)

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PM blames Palestinians for deadlock in peace talks, says U.S. officials due to arrive in Israel to push forward talks on core issues.

January 03, 2011 (KATAKAMI / HAARETZ) --- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday that he had agreed to the U.S. suggestion of a three-month extension to the West Bank settlement freeze, but the Americans were the ones who retracted the offer.


"The United States asked us to consider extending the freeze by three months, and the truth is that we were prepared to do so," Netanyahu said while speaking before the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

Netanyahu said that contrary to what was reported, Israel did not refuse extending the freeze on West Bank settlements by three months, saying it was eventually the "United States who decided against that direction, rightfully, in my opinion."


In early December, the Obama administration announced that Washington was "ending the contacts to try to achieve another moratorium" after months of heavy negotiations to offer Israel a series of U.S. guarantees in exchange for the freeze.

"I told Obama that I am prepared to go with this to the cabinet and that I will be able to enforce the move, but then I received the surprising phone call from the Americans who said they no longer demand that Israel extends the freeze," Netanyahu explained.

"The Americans were right in saying that the settlement freeze will lead to a dead end, in which we would have entered an endless path of settlement freezes, but despite it all I agreed to go through with it," he emphasized.

Netanyahu told MKs that U.S. officials will arrive in Israel in mid-January in order to push forward the peace process and discuss core issues in talks with Palestinians.
Moreover, Netanyahu again reiterated his stance that the Palestinians were responsible for the deadlock in peace talks.

"During the cabinet meeting on Sunday, I called on Abu Mazen [Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas], to hold direct negotiations, but I got no answer," he said.

"We took many actions in order to move the peace process forward but the Palestinians did not even advance one millimeter despite the settlement freeze. The Palestinians entered talks only toward the end of the freeze and the only subject they wanted to discuss was an extension of the freeze."

Netanyahu also noted the Palestinians' attempts to pursue unilateral statehood, saying that these moves will fail and will not yield any results.


"We are aware of their steps – even the congress opposed these unilateral steps and it seems that the Americans will not be partners to a forced agreement," he said.  (*)

Desember 12, 2010

PM Netanyahu's Remarks at the Start of the Weekly Cabinet Meeting


Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem December 12, 2010. REUTERS/Bernat Armangue/Pool
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Jerusalem, Dec 12 (KATAKAMI / PRIME MINISTER’s OFFICE) --- Following are Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's remarks at the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting today:


I instructed Government ministries to unite their forces and act so that dealing with those who were hurt in the fire, and the infrastructures, will be detailed, efficient, focused and – above all – quick, in order for normal life to be restored as quickly as possible.
 
The team of director-generals chaired by Prime Minister's Office Director-General Eyal Gabai has already toured the area, met with residents and begun the work of rehabilitation.  We allocated NIS 4.5 million, for preliminary rehabilitation, to the Carmel Coast Regional Council and NIS 3 million to Isfiya.

Today, another NIS 1 million will be transferred to Daliyat Al-Carmel and another NIS 2 million to Tirat Hacarmel.  The families that were left without a roof over their heads have already received NIS 2,500 per person in assistance, i.e. an average of NIS 10,000 per family.  This is to help them with basic needs.

Additionally, the Social Welfare and Social Services Ministry is allocating almost NIS 500,000 in preliminary assistance for clothes and medicines.  The Construction and Housing Ministry is preparing a detailed plan to repair the physical damages to infrastructures and buildings.

The Transportation Ministry is already carrying out work in the field to repair transportation infrastructures.  The Environmental Protection Ministry will submit – by the end of the month – a plan to restore the animals and plants of the Carmel forests.  The other ministries, each in its own field, have also joined in, responsibly and with full force.
 
In order to hasten the work and reduce bureaucracy, today I am submitting a draft proposal to cancel the need for tenders in the rehabilitation work.  This is one of the greatest things that could cost us in the months ahead and, therefore, today we will cancel the need for tenders as part of the Government's special effort to hasten the rehabilitation work.

By the end of this month, or at our meeting next Sunday, or by the one after that, but no later, we will submit to the Cabinet a draft decision on a national fire authority, and this is in addition to the decision that we have already made to allocate an additional NIS 100 million to the Fire and Rescue Service in order to deal with shortages.  The decision, which we made before the fire, followed the urgent request of Interior Minister Eli Yishai.
 
We are currently carrying out several important missions: Rehabilitating the communities, dealing with the evacuees, rehabilitating the Carmel forests, and quickly implementing the two main lessons – establishing a national fire and an aerial firefighting force.  We are urgently advancing these two issues and decisions in their regard will be submitted forthwith." (*)

Israel’s leader does not want to share Jerusalem


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Natanyahu speaks during a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday, Dec. 12, 2010. In the background is a portrait of Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism. (AP Photos/Bernat Armangue, Pool)



JERUSALEM, Dec 12 (KATAKAMI/ AP) --- Israel's leader dismissed on Sunday a top ally's call to share the holy city of Jerusalem with the Palestinians, another reminder of the challenges the U.S. faces as it shifts gears on its troubled Mideast peacemaking strategy.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's reaffirmation of his intention to hold on to east Jerusalem was liable to escalate friction between the two sides and with the Americans. The White House Mideast envoy is scheduled to arrive this week in another attempt to push peace efforts forward.

The conflicting claims to east Jerusalem lie at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The dispute over the area, home to sensitive Jewish, Muslim and Christian holy sites, has derailed past peace talks and spilled into violence.

The Palestinians want to establish their future state in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war. Israel later annexed east Jerusalem in a move that is not recognized by the international community.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton expressed frustration with the Israeli-Palestinian impasse over the weekend, though she did not suggest a new way forward. She spoke at a forum in Washington.
Addressing the same gathering, Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the holy city will have to be shared as part of a future peace deal.

An Israeli official told The Associated Press that Barak was expressing a personal opinion, not the government's position.

"Those remarks were not coordinated with the prime minister," the official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because Netanyahu has not responded publicly to Barak's remarks or to Clinton's speech.
Clinton and Barak spoke a few days after the U.S. abandoned efforts to coax Israel into another temporary freeze on new construction in West Bank Jewish settlements.

Since Netanyahu came to power nearly two years ago, Israelis and Palestinians have not gotten anywhere close to tackling the major obstacles to peace such as the status of Jerusalem, borders between Israel and a future Palestinian state, or the fate of millions of Palestinian refugees from the war surrounding Israel's 1948 creation.

In her speech Friday, Clinton urged both sides to lay out their positions on these core issues "without delay and with real specificity." She pointedly called for compromise on the contested holy city, observing that "there will surely be no peace without an agreement" on Jerusalem — "the most sensitive of all the issues."
Israel's refusal to freeze settlement construction in east Jerusalem led the U.S. last week to abandon its efforts to seek the suspension. The Palestinians' had refused to resume direct talks without a total halt on construction for Jews in east Jerusalem and the West Bank.

The U.S.-led negotiations — which broke down in September three weeks after an earlier settlement moratorium expired — are going to revert to their previous format of indirect, U.S.-mediated talks.

While openly admitting her frustration, Clinton insisted the Obama administration would continue pressing for a solution. Washington's special envoy to the Mideast, George Mitchell, is expected to meet with Israeli and Palestinian leaders this week.  (*)

Desember 08, 2010

Photostream : Shimon Peres, Benjamin Netanyahu honors foreign firefighters


Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (front 4th L) and President Shimon Peres (front 5th L) pose for a group photo with members of International firefighting teams during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank the teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) and President Shimon Peres (R) pose for a photo with a Turkish representative during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank international teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner )

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) and President Shimon Peres (R) pose for a photo with a member from the Greek firefighting team during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank international teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner )

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) and President Shimon Peres (R) pose for a photo with a member from the Palestinian firefighting team during a ceremony in Jerusalem to thank international teams for taking part in efforts to extinguish a forest fire on Mount Carmel December 7, 2010. Israeli police said the fires that consumed more than 12,000 acres (5,000 hectares) of woodlands, millions of trees and more than 100 homes, were extinguished on Monday, five days after taking hold of the Carmel ridge outside the port city of Haifa. (Getty Images / REUTERS/Baz Ratner )