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Why Kerry Wants a Fast Reboot Of Israeli-Palestinian Peace Talks

US Secretary of State John Kerry wants a quick resumption of Mideast peace talks, hoping to elicit some flexibility from Israel and to head off UN countermeasures by the Palestinians.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry gives a thumbs up as he departs Kuwait City, June 26, 2013, en route to Amman, Jordan. REUTERS/Jacquelyn Martin/Pool (KUWAIT - Tags: POLITICS) - RTX111TC

Upon embarking on his fifth visit to Jerusalem, in an attempt to restart peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians, Secretary of State John Kerry stated in Kuwait: “We need to be showing some kind of progress before September,” when Palestinians can start exercising their rights at the United Nations after achieving the status of an observer state.

This statement alludes to the United States’ attempt to pre-empt any initiative by the Palestinian state to join any UN agencies, especially the International Court of Justice, by giving the impression that peace talks are back on the table. In this regard, Kerry is seeking to persuade Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to show some  “flexibility” to relay it to the president of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, when he meets him later on in Jordan.

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