An 'official source' in the Prime Minister's office says that
Israel will not agree to freeze 'settlement construction.'
An official source in Jerusalem told The Israel Post that "Abu Mazen [Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas] received this opportunity once. This will not happen again."
"If the Palestinians want to talk they know we are waiting for them at the table," the source said.
Well, yeah. Except that there already is a
de facto freeze. At least for now.
Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has quietly curbed new building projects in Jewish
settlements, an Israeli watchdog group and media reports said on
Tuesday, in an apparent bid to help U.S. efforts to revive peace talks
with the Palestinians.
"We see there have been no new
construction tenders issued for the West Bank since President Barack
Obama visited (in March)," Yariv Oppenheimer, head of Peace Now, which
monitors settlement activity in the occupied West Bank and East
Jerusalem, told Reuters after assessing the group's data.
Israeli
Army Radio reported that Netanyahu had met Housing Minister Uri Ariel
to order a freeze in tenders for new housing projects in settlements in
the West Bank, effectively delaying the construction of hundreds of
homes.
The Haaretz newspaper,
quoting unidentified senior officials, said Netanyahu had promised U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry that he would refrain until mid-June from
publishing new tenders in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, areas that
Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war.
What could go wrong?
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