Netanyahu says ready to negotiate as Bennett says will lead to violence
Published June 25, 2013
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israel is ready to enter serious peace negotiations with the Palestinians, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, following statements by coalition partner Naftali Bennett.
“Our fervent hope is for peace, a genuine peace that can be achieved only through direct negotiations without preconditions. We’re ready to enter such negotiations. I hope the Palestinians are too,” Netanyahu said at the start of a meeting Tuesday morning with Georgian Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili. “And I have to say that our goal is not just to enter and put a ‘V’ [check the box] to show that we’ve begun negotiations. Our goal is to persist in the negotiations, to engage in them consistently over a serious period of time in order to try to grapple with all the issues and come to an agreement that resolves the fundamental issues in the conflict.”
U.S. Secretary of State is scheduled to arrive in Israel later this week to try to bring the two sides back to the peace table.
Bennett, head of the Jewish Home Party, told Israel Radio Tuesday morning that a peace agreement with the Palestinians would lead to more rocket and rock attacks
“If you look at when there’s violence, it follows peace agreements,” Bennett said. “The public sometimes forgets – but an overwhelming majority of the Palestinian public voted for Hamas.”
He added that he “won’t oppose negotiations” as long as there are no preconditions.
The Palestinians have called for a freeze on construction in the settlements and the release of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails before they will return to the negotiating table.
Israel’s Channel 2 on Monday reported that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas was prepared to resume negotiations, something the P.A. later denied. On Tuesday morning, chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said the Palestinians were ready to start talking and had never demanded preconditions in order to do so.
Erekat told Army Radio that he was asking the Israelis for an agenda for the negotiations, not preconditions. “If you say no to the ’67 border, no to Jerusalem, no to refugees, no to the military, what is there to negotiate with you about?” he said.
Bennett also told Israel Radio that the Israeli public wants the government to concern itself with economic issues, not peace negotiations. “The public elected us to invest in economic and social issues, to lower the cost of living, and not in cocktails in Oslo,” he said.
Bennett said he opposed more withdrawals and instead called for joint economic development with the Palestinians.