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Written by Ewen MacAskill in Washington and Julian Borger Ewen MacAskill in Washington and Julian Borger
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Category: News News
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Published: 25 August 2009 25 August 2009
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Last Updated: 25 August 2009 25 August 2009
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Created: 25 August 2009 25 August 2009
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Barack Obama on brink of deal for Middle East peace talks
• US to adopt much tougher line over Iran's nuclear ambitions
• Israel to freeze construction of settlements on West Bank
• France and Russia offer to host Middle East peace conference
* Ewen MacAskill in Washington and Julian Borger
* guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 25 August 2009 20.00 BST
* http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/aug/25/barack-obama-middle-east-peace
Palestinians walk through a door in a section of the barrier between Jerusalem and the West Bank
Palestinians walk through a door in a section of the barrier between
Jerusalem and the West Bank. Photograph: Muhammed Muheisen/AP
Barack Obama is close to brokering an Israeli-Palestinian deal that
will allow him to announce a resumption of the long-stalled Middle East
peace talks before the end of next month, according to US, Israeli,
Palestinian and European officials.
Key to bringing Israel on board is a promise by the US to adopt a much
tougher line with Iran over its alleged nuclear weapons programme. The
US, along with Britain and France, is planning to push the United
Nations security council to expand sanctions to include Iran's oil and
gas industry, a move that could cripple its economy.
In return, the Israeli government will be expected to agree to a
partial freeze on the construction of settlements in the Middle East.
In the words of one official close to the negotiations: "The message
is: Iran is an existential threat to Israel; settlements are not."
Details of the breakthrough deal will be hammered out tomorrow in
London, where the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, is due to
hold talks with the US special envoy, George Mitchell. Netanyahu met
Gordon Brown today in Downing Street, where the two discussed both
settlements and the Iranian nuclear programme.
Although the negotiations are being held in private, they have reached
such an advanced stage that both France and Russia have approached the
US offering to host a peace conference.
Obama has pencilled in the announcement of his breakthrough for either
a meeting of world leaders at the UN general assembly in New York in
the week beginning 23 September or the G20 summit in Pittsburgh on
24-25 September.
The president, who plans to make his announcement flanked by Netanyahu
and the Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas – plus the leaders of as many
Arab states as he can muster – hopes that a final peace agreement can
be negotiated within two years, a timetable viewed as unrealistic by
Middle East analysts.
Obama had hoped to unveil his plans before the start of Ramadan last
weekend but failed to complete the deal with the Israelis or the Arab
states in time.
As well as a tougher US approach to Iran, which the Israelis see as
their top priority, the deal would see Israel offering a temporary and
partial moratorium on the expansion of settlements on the West Bank in
return for moves by Arab states towards normalisation of relations.
This would allow Obama to announce talks on the bigger
Israeli-Palestinian issues – borders, the future of Jerusalem and the
future of Palestinian refugees – with the US sitting in as a mediator.
After the meeting at No 10 today, Netanyahu said he was hopeful that a
compromise would be reached to allow the peace process to restart while
Israeli settlers could "continue living normal lives". Brown said he
emerged from the talks more optimistic about Middle East peace. He also
pledged that if there were no immediate progress on the Iranian nuclear
impasse, further sanctions would be "a matter of priority".
Although Netanyahu told his cabinet before leaving Israel that the deal
would not be sealed in London tomorrow, he and Mitchell are now down to
the fine detail.
Israel is offering a nine- to 12-month moratorium on settlement
building that would exclude East Jerusalem and most of the 2,400 homes
that Israel says work has already begun on.
Ian Kelly, a US state department spokesman, on Monday reflected the
increasing optimism within the Obama administration, saying "we're
getting closer to laying this foundation" for the resumption of talks.
Another official closely involved in the discussions said: "It has been
pretty hard going but we are getting there. We are closer to a deal
with the Israelis than many think. The Arabs are more difficult to pin
down."
If Iran does not respond to UN demands that it stop enriching uranium
by time of the UN and G20 summits, the US, Britain and France are to
lead a UN security council push to expand sanctions, expected to target
Iran's dependence on imports of refined petroleum products and its
reliance on foreign technology to develop its oil and gas industry.
Russia and China are expected to object to such punitive measures, and
any western attempt to enforce a partial embargo threatens to breach
the broad international consensus on handling Iran.
A report on the Iranian programme by the UN's nuclear watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), due to be published by the
end of this week, will be crucial in setting the scene for such
sanctions, and the outgoing IAEA director general, Mohamed ElBaradei,
has come under intense western pressure to make the report sharply
critical of Tehran.
Israel, in return for a deal on settlements, is seeking not only a
tougher line over Iran but normalisation of relations with Arab states,
such as overflight rights for its airline El Al, establishment of trade
offices and embassies, and an end to the ban on travellers with Israeli
stamps in their passports.
Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Morocco have so far
tentatively agreed. Saudi Arabia has refused, saying Israel has had
enough concessions.
But the US is taking comfort from the fact that, crucially, Saudi
Arabia has not tried to block other Arab states from signing up. "They
may come on board last, but they will come on board," a European
official said.
A coalition of Arab states, thought to include the Saudis, has been in
secret contact with Israel to discuss what they see as a common threat
posed by Iran.