Saturday, September 19, 2009

Obama, Netanyahu, Abbas: New York

by Christi Parsons

Palestinian and Israeli leaders will sit down with President Obama on Tuesday while in New York for a meeting of the United Nations, a three-way meeting that the administration has been trying to broker for weeks.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas have agreed to a three-way meeting with the U.S. president, Obama press secretary Robert Gibbs announced this afternoon in a written statement. Each leader will also meeti separately with Obama, according to the bulletin.

It wasn't immediately clear whether the scheduling of the meetings portended a full-scale resumption of Middle East peace negotiations. White House officials had avoided publicly laying out specific requirements for their participation in a trilateral meeting.

But in recent days, National Security Council sources have said they didn't want a "meeting for meeting's sake," and instead would insist on entering talks with some promise of progress.

For the administration to count the meetings as a success, the parties will have to emerge from them with plausible signs that negotiations are moving forward.

The written statement from the White House hit an optimistic note that that will happen.

"These meetings will continue the efforts of President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Special Envoy George Mitchell to lay the groundwork for the relaunch of negotiations, and to create a positive context for those negotiations so that they can succeed," Gibbs wrote.

Today's announcement follows weeks of talks among the Palestinian and Israeli leaders with Mitchell, Obama's special Middle East envoy dispatched to get negotiations going again.

"It is another sign of the president's deep commitment to comprehensive peace that he wants to personally engage at this juncture, as we continue our efforts to encourage all sides to take responsibility for peace and to create a positive context for the resumption of negotiations," Mitchell said in the statement.

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