US Secretary of State John Kerry
US Secretary of State John Kerry flew by helicopter to the West Bank from Jordan on Friday to meet Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas as he battled to salvage his Middle East peace bid.
Kerry spent four hours earlier on the phone talking to both sides before making the decision to dash to Ramallah to meet Abbas for the third time this week.
Mustafa Barghouti from the Palestinian National Initiative told Arab Today that Kerry has delayed his return to Washington so he can continue exerting pressure on both the Israelis and the Palestinians to return to the negotiating table without any preconditions
Kerry is expected to announce the resumption of negotiations in Amman on Friday evening, according to Palestinian news agency Ma’an.
Kerry had earlier Friday met twice with Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erakat in his Amman hotel.
The whirlwind diplomacy came after the Palestinian leadership in Ramallah rejected Kerry's proposals for a framework to guide the relaunch of peace talks with the Israelis stalled for nearly three years.
Erakat had planned to tell Kerry that a return to talks could not happen based on his plan, a Palestinian official told AFP ahead of their meetings.
"Erakat will inform Kerry that without a clear basis on the 1967 borders, a settlement freeze and a clear position on the release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel, the Palestinian side thinks there will be no talks," he said.
Their first meeting lasted barely 45 minutes, but Kerry and Erakat then went back into talks which lasted more than an hour and half, State Department officials said.
Shortly after the second talks broke up, a Palestinian official told AFP that Kerry had decided to travel to the West Bank.
The setback to Kerry's peace push came from the governing Revolutionary Council of Abbas's own Fatah movement, which demanded changes to the US plan.
The broader Palestine Liberation Organisation, which also includes leftwing factions less sympathetic towards a compromise, said it was also drawing up a formal response to Kerry's proposals.
Talks have stuttered and started for decades in the elusive bid to reach a final peace deal between the Arab world and Israel.
But they collapsed completely in September 2010 when Israel refused to keep up a freeze on settlement building in Palestinian territories.
A State Department official said in a statement issued just after midnight that serious Palestinian debate over resuming talks was "appropriate and encouraging".
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Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
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