Antony Blinken meets top Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in occupied West Bank

Antony Blinken meets top Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas in occupied West Bank

FP Staff January 10, 2024, 18:44:32 IST

According to pool reporters who accompanied the top diplomat from the United States, Blinken got past Israeli checkpoints and arrived in Ramallah, the de facto capital of the Palestinian people

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The Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met on Wednesday in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Blinken had earlier pressed Israeli leaders to provide a roadmap for the creation of a Palestinian state. According to pool reporters who accompanied the top diplomat from the United States, Blinken got past Israeli checkpoints and arrived in Ramallah, the de facto capital of the Palestinian people. The visit took place the day after discussions regarding Israel’s war against Hamas, regional unrest, and the future of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were held on Tuesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his war cabinet. Blinken would discuss with Abbas the PA’s responsibility to reform itself and improve its governance, he said in a news conference on Tuesday evening, reflecting Washington’s view that Abbas, 88, needs to overhaul the organization in preparation to govern a post-war Gaza. The PA, which exercises limited self-rule in some areas of the occupied West Bank, remains the best hope for a unified Palestinian government of both Gaza and the West Bank. Blinken came to Israel after visiting Washington’s Arab allies, who he said want closer relations with Israel but only if that included a “practical pathway” to a Palestinian state. U.S.-brokered talks on a Palestinian state in territory now occupied by Israel collapsed almost a decade ago. Right-wing leaders in Israel’s current ruling coalition oppose Palestinian statehood. At his news conference, Blinken declined to characterize how Netanyahu and his cabinet responded to his appeal on a Palestinian state. He said Israel would have to make “hard decisions, hard choices” to take advantage of the opportunity offered by regional integration. “Extremist settler violence carried out with impunity, settlement expansion, demolitions, evictions, all make it harder, not easier for Israel to achieve lasting peace and security,” he said, alluding to conflict in the West Bank. (with inputs from Reuters)

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