Netanyahu, Clinton vow cooperation on Iran

Netanyahu, Clinton vow cooperatio… JPost – Diplomacy & Politics.

By JPOST.COM STAFF, KHALED ABU TOAMEH
07/16/2012 20:35
Clinton says US, Israel consulting on “almost daily basis”; Palestinian officials skeptical of peace breakthroughs after US Secretary of State meets with Palestinian PM Salam Fayyad.

Clinton and Netanyahu meet in Israel.
Photo: Moshe Milner / GPO

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met Monday night and vowed cooperation on a broad range of issues, with Iran standing out, in particular, among them.

“We have our common goals to make sure that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon,” Netanyahu said prior to the meeting.

Clinton said: “We will continue to consult closely as we have on an almost daily basis between our two governments to chart the best way forward for peace and stability for Israel, the United States and the world.”

Egypt, Syria and the peace process were also expected to be on the agenda.

Clinton also met with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad on Monday, but the Palestinian Authority said Clinton did not carry new ideas that could pave the way for the resumption of the peace talks with Israel.

Following the meeting, a PA official in Ramallah said that the talks focused on the PA’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.

PA President Mahmoud Abbas, who met with Clinton in Paris last week, presented his demands to the US Administration and requested that Washington exert pressure on Israel to respond favorably.

The official did not say whether Clinton relayed to Fayyad a reply 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.

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