Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




WAR REPORT
Kerry in danger of losing big bet on Middle East peace
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 05, 2014


EU backs Kerry's Mideast push
Athens (AFP) April 05, 2014 - European foreign ministers on Saturday said they fully supported efforts by US Secretary of State John Kerry to keep Middle East peace talks alive as tension mounted on both sides.

"We support the efforts of Secretary of State Kerry," EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton said at the close of a two-day meeting in Athens.

Kerry has laboured lately to bring Palestinians and Israelis back from the brink.

On Friday he warned from Morocco that there were "limits" to the time and effort the United States could devote to the process "if the parties themselves are unwilling to take constructive steps".

But Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has rejected Kerry's appeals to withdraw applications he signed on Tuesday to adhere to 15 international treaties in pursuit of recognition for the Palestinians' promised state.

And Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has likewise ignored calls to refrain from hardline moves, and has reportedly asked his officials to draw up reprisals.

"Kerry's initiative is without doubt in a critical phase," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said on Saturday.

"The radicals on both sides seem to start to prevail...we have to prevent that," Steinmeier told reporters.

John Kerry's high-stakes gamble that he could finally achieve the dream of generations and bring peace to the Middle East seems to be collapsing as easily as a house of cards.

Despite a dozen visits to Israel and the West Bank since he became US secretary of state 14 months ago and many more late-night meetings with his recalcitrant partners in capitals around the world, it appears after all that he may have been trumped.

While there was always a certain hubris to his mission impossible, the political dangers facing wily Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu conspired this week with decades of pent-up anger among Palestinians to throw up the most serious crisis to the fragile peace negotiations since they resumed in July.

Yet at the start of Kerry's latest overseas trip there was little to suggest he would return to the US 13 days later with his peace effort in trouble and a blunt admission that he and the White House needed to "evaluate" the next steps.

Indeed, Kerry had not visited Israel in three months in a tacit recognition that each trip raised expectations and usually triggered some kind of provocative move from one of the parties.

His monthly commute between Washington and Jerusalem had also begun to raise eyebrows with little tangible progress to show and an April 29 deadline looming.

Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon had called Kerry "obsessional" and "messianic" and at home some critics said he was "delusional."

- 'Reality-check time' -

All roads to Jerusalem are littered with past failed peace negotiations which have wound through places such as Madrid, Oslo and Camp David.

But this time Kerry felt there was something within his grasp, a deal under which both sides would agree to keep talking into next year, as some of the nitty-gritty contours of a pact began to emerge.

He deeply believes that a comprehensive peace treaty is the only way to secure Israel's future and build a better tomorrow for Palestinians, with both peoples having suffered too much.

So the 70-year-old former senator, the son of a diplomat, stepped willingly into the quagmire that is Middle East peace.

He has invested huge amounts of energy, setting a punishing schedule which would defeat many half his age and remaining eternally optimistic and unflappable even after hours locked in tense negotiations.

It was sobering therefore on Friday as he prepared to head home -- after the Israelis canceled the last prisoner releases and the Palestinians said they would seek statehood at 15 agencies at the UN -- that in a rare moment of frankness and frustration he admitted "it's reality-check time."

"There are limits to the amount of time and effort that the United States can spend if the parties themselves are unwilling to take constructive steps in order to be able to move forward," Kerry told reporters in Rabat.

With the war in Syria, Iran's nuclear program and the crisis in Ukraine, "we have an enormous amount on the plate," he said.

- No-one walking away yet -

Exactly what Kerry's next move will be remains uncertain, and he has insisted that the negotiators remain at work on the ground.

But it's more than possible that he'll give both sides a little space to figure out what they want to do, as he huddles with the White House.

There will be another three-way meeting likely on Sunday in the region to assess the way forward, officials close to the talks say, and the US insists the negotiations are not dead.

Only a few months ago, Kerry's stock had been rising with his brand of face-to-face diplomacy winning praise.

He had helped kick-start the peace talks after a three-year gap, sealed a deal with Russia to rid Syria of its chemical weapons, and negotiations with Iran over its suspect nuclear program had made the first progress in a decade.

Now critics will be sharpening their pencils in glee.

But he has three more years in office, and almost boundless patience.

The White House Friday defended the "tireless" Kerry, saying his long-odds Middle East peace bid had not been a waste of time because the stakes were so high.

But Josh Earnest, a White House spokesman, admitted that the chances of Kerry succeeding when he embarked on his Middle East peace quest a year ago had never been high.

"I don't know if people in Las Vegas are betting on these kinds of things these days, but I'm sure the odds... would be very long."

Earnest refused to say that Washington had given up.

"That presupposes an additional step here, that at some point somebody throws up their hands and walks away. Secretary Kerry's certainly not willing to do that."

.


Related Links






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News





WAR REPORT
Two guerrillas, one sergeant killed in Paraguay clash
Asuncion (AFP) April 03, 2014
Two members of a guerrilla group and an armed forces sergeant have been killed in a confrontation in central Paraguay, the interior ministry said Thursday. The clash late Wednesday occurred in a cotton silo that was taken over by 15 members of the Paraguayan People's Army (EPP) who had kidnapped the Brazilian owner's 16-year-old son. The skirmish occurred in the department of Concepcion, ... read more


WAR REPORT
Soyuz ready for Sentinel-1A satellite launch

Boeing wins contract to design DARPA Airborne Satellite Launch

Arianespace's seventh Soyuz mission from French Guiana is readied for liftoff next week

NASA Seeks Suborbital Flight Proposals

WAR REPORT
The Opposition of Mars

Mars yard ready for Red Planet rover

Mars One building simulated colony to vet potential colonists

Cleaner NASA Rover Sees Its Shadow in Martian Spring

WAR REPORT
Unique camera from NASA's moon missions sold at auction

Expeditions to the Moon: beware of meteorites

A Wet Moon

ASU camera creates stunning mosaic of moon's polar region

WAR REPORT
Dwarf planet 'Biden' identified in an unlikely region of our solar system

Planet X myth debunked

WISE Finds Thousands Of New Stars But No Planet X

New Horizons Reaches the Final 4 AU

WAR REPORT
Lick's Automated Planet Finder: First robotic telescope for planet hunters

Space Sunflower May Help Snap Pictures of Planets

NRL Researchers Detect Water Around a Hot Jupiter

UK joins the planet hunt with Europe's PLATO mission

WAR REPORT
Advancing the Technology Readiness Of SLS Adaptive Controls

Airbus Defence and Space to cooperate with Snecma on electric propulsion

Boeing on Schedule to Deliver World's First All-Electric Satellites

Europe's IXV atmospheric reentry demonstrator ready for final tests

WAR REPORT
China launches experimental satellite

Tiangong's New Mission

"Space Odyssey": China's aspiration in future space exploration

China to launch first "space shuttle bus" this year

WAR REPORT
Cosmic collision creates mini-planet with rings

Hubble Space Telescope Spots Mars-Bound Comet Sprout Multiple Jets

Comet lander awakes from long hibernation

First Ring System Around Asteroid




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.