Clinton: I do not expect Pollard to be released (JERUSALEM POST) By HERB KEINON, KHALED ABU TOAMEH 07/17/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=277727
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US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Monday that she did not
expect any change in the situation of jailed Israeli spy Jonathan
Pollard.
“With respect to Mr. Pollard, he was convicted of spying in 1987. He
was sentenced to life in prison, he is serving that sentence, and I
do not have any expectations that that is going to change,” Clinton
said.
Her comments on Pollard came at a press conference following a day of
a marathon talks with Israeli officials in Jerusalem. During her
visit, Clinton was met by protesters calling for Pollard’s release.
Referring to Iran at the press conference, Clinton said the US
will “use all elements of American power to prevent Iran from
obtaining nuclear weapons.”
Clinton said that Iran was one of the focuses of her talks, and said
the US will continue to rally the international community, and Tehran
is now under greater pressure than ever. This pressure, she said,
will increase. She said her consultations were part of an ongoing, in-
depth dialogue with Israel.
Clinton dodged a question about whether the administration erred by
making the settlements a key issue in the beginning of US President
Barack Obama’s tenure.
The secretary of state encouraged Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
at a late-night meeting on Monday to come up with a package of
gestures to the Palestinians to bring them back to the negotiating
table.
Clinton, who met Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Salam Fayyad
earlier in the day, and who met PA President Mahmoud Abbas in Paris
12 days ago, told Netanyahu that the duo are Israel’s best partners,
and it was not clear who may succeed them.
Clinton flew back to the US after midnight, following her meeting
with Netanyahu and a brief press conference.
The secretary of state, who arrived Sunday evening from Cairo where
she met with the new Egyptian leadership, began a series of meetings
at 9 a.m. on Monday with Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman.
Subsequently, in Jerusalem, she then met in succession with President
Shimon Peres, Fayyad, Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Netanyahu.
Netanyahu invited his senior ministers: Barak, Liberman, and Vice
Premier Moshe Ya’alon to dinner with Clinton. Before the dinner,
Clinton and Netanyahu met alone for 30 minutes.
The main four issues covered in the talks throughout the day were
Iran, Clinton’s impressions about the changes in Egypt, the
diplomatic process with the Palestinians and the ongoing violence in
Syria. Channel 2 reported that Clinton also raised the issue of
Turkey, and said Israel should work for a rapprochement with Ankara.
According to the report, the secretary of state said the break with
Turkey was harming Israel’s strategic interests and making it hard to
isolate Iran and place pressure on Syria.
In regard to Iran, Clinton told Peres – according to Israeli
officials – that Obama was committed to maintaining a wide
international coalition to prevent Tehran from gaining nuclear
weapons. She said that much had been done and that the economic
sanctions would become harsher.
Clinton, during a public statement she made alongside Peres, said she
arrived at a “moment of great change and transformation in the
region.” She referred to this as a time of “uncertainty, but also of
opportunity,” and said that it was “in moments like these that
friends like us have to think together, act together. We are called
to be smart, creative and courageous.”
Clinton was accompanied on her brief visit by Wendy Sherman, the US
representative at the P5+1 talks with Iran, and US Middle East envoy
David Hale.
Sherman’s presence was a clear indication that Iran figured
prominently in the talks. A senior State Department official said
just prior to Clinton’s arrival Sunday night that Sherman would help
Clinton “bring the Israelis up to speed on the latest in the P5+1
process,” and also to talk about the “pressure side of the dual track
strategy,” a term that refers to diplomatic engagement with Iran
coupled with sanctions.
The official sought to create the impression that there was nothing
unusual about a parade of senior US officials that began arriving
last week, including US Deputy Secretary of State William Burns,
National Security Adviser Tom Donilon and Clinton. US Secretary of
Defense Leon Panetta is expected in the coming weeks.
“There is nothing special about the sequence of events other than we
always have a very sort of intense case of engagement and diplomacy
with the Israelis,” the official said. He added that the discussions
about Iran with the Israelis are only about the P5+1 discussions, and
the sanctions.
“It is not about anything beyond that,” he said, in an obvious effort
to deflate the idea that perhaps the sides were talking about
military action. The discussions with Israel, he said, are “where we
think we are in the diplomacy and where we think we are on the
pressure track, and what next steps we can take on each and what the
Israeli assessment is on each track.”
The official said that regarding coordination on Iran, the intense
pace of engagement with Israel “matches the intensity and urgency of
the issue,” and is “similar to the type of engagement that we have
with our other close allies, including the British and French, on
this issue.”
Britain and France, along with Germany, China, and Russia, make up
the P5+1 with the US.
On the Palestinian issue, the official said that Clinton’s meetings
in Jerusalem, coupled with the meeting she had with Abbas in Paris,
will allow her to “take stock and assess how the US can support next
steps in the process.”
Asked what the administration felt it has accomplished in four years
of working on the diplomatic process, the office said that it was
obvious Clinton would have liked to be coming to Israel now to sign a
peace deal.
“We would have liked to have done that two years ago,” he said. “The
fact that we’ve been unable to do so is a testament to the difficulty
of the challenge. But the fact that we’re still at it is a testament
to just how important the issue is to us and to her personally.”
The PA said that Clinton did not carry new ideas that could pave the
way for the resumption of the peace talks with Israel.
After the meeting between Clinton and Fayyad, a PA official in
Ramallah said that the talks focused on the Palestinian Authority’s
demand for additional weapons to its security forces in the West Bank
and the release of Palestinians from Israeli prisons.
The PA is demanding the release of Palestinians who were imprisoned
before the signing of the Oslo Accords and permission to import
weapons before its leaders agree to return to the negotiating table.
Abbas, who met with Clinton in Paris last week, presented his demands
to the Obama Administration and requested that Washington exert
pressure on Israel to respond favorably.
The official did not say whether Clinton relayed a reply to Fayyad
from the Israeli government to the PA demands. However, the official
pointed out that Clinton did not carry new ideas that could
facilitate the resumption of the peace process.
“We don’t expect a breakthrough as the Americans are too busy with
their presidential election,” the PA official told The Jerusalem
Post. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 07/17/12)
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