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					 																Written by Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem						Harriet Sherwood in Jerusalem									
 
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					 																Category: News						News									
 
			
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						Published: 04 November 2010						04 November 2010				
 
			
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					 					Last Updated: 04 November 2010					04 November 2010					
 
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						 						Created: 04 November 2010						04 November 2010					
 
				
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Commenting on the swift collapse of the talks, Hague said it had been 
right to try to get momentum going. "The early session of the talks were
 held in an atmosphere of great sincerity," he said. "The UK wants to 
see a fresh moratorium because the prize here is enormous, of long-term 
peace. The price being asked to get back into those talks ... is well 
worth paying."
He indicated that the UK would prefer a substantial extension to the 
freeze rather than the 60 days demanded by the US. "We don't want to 
come back to this issue every few months," he said, but he added that 
the UK was "not managing that process".
Alternatives to a negotiated settlement of the conflict were 
"difficult", he said. Asked whether the UK would back a tentative plan 
by the Palestinians to ask the UN security council to recognise a 
Palestinian state on the pre-1967 borders, he said: "It can be a false 
hope to think there is a good plan B or plan C. I would discourage this 
at this moment."
Hague's first visit as foreign secretary to Israel and the Palestinian 
territories was in danger of being marred by a row over attempts to 
obtain warrants in the UK for the arrest of Israeli politicians for 
alleged war crimes.
A statement issued after Hague's meeting with Netanyahu this morning 
said Israel welcomed the "clear commitment" by the UK to amend the law 
on universal jurisdiction under which such warrants were issued.
It added that the next "strategic dialogue" meeting between the two 
countries, which Israel had postponed in protest, would "take place very
 soon, in Israel".
Hague described the episode as "a little frustrating", but the 
difficulties had now been overcome. It had been, he said, "a mistake" on
 behalf of the Israeli foreign ministry rather than intentional.
Hague also courted controversy by meeting leaders of unarmed protests 
against the Israeli occupation in West Bank towns and villages in 
Ramallah on Wednesday. According to the Popular Struggle Co-ordination 
Committee, the foreign secretary gave "an unequivocal show of support in
 the face of ongoing Israeli repression".
Today, Hague said there was no contradiction between being a friend of Israel and a friend of the Palestinians.