Obama to Mideast leaders: Seize moment for peace

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – President Barack Obama urged  Israeli and Palestinian leaders yesterday not to let the  chance for peace slip away as he opened a U.S.-sponsored summit  to relaunch direct talks shadowed by Middle East violence.

But with a fresh West Bank shooting attack and a persistent  deadlock over Jewish settlements, Obama acknowledged skepticism  “in some quarters” about his prospects for succeeding where so  many U.S. leaders have failed and said he was under no  illusions about the challenges ahead.
Wading into hands-on peacemaking on the eve of restarting  face-to-face negotiations after a 20-month hiatus, Obama  brought both sides together for ceremonial handshakes at the  White House and a commitment to try to forge within a year a  deal on Palestinian statehood.

“As I told each of them today, this moment of opportunity  may not soon come again. They cannot afford to let it slip  away,” Obama said after one-on-one talks with Israeli Prime  Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud  Abbas.

But the peace process already faced a major stumbling block  with Israel resisting any formal extension of a partial freeze  on construction in Jewish settlements in the occupied West  Bank. Abbas has threatened to pull out of the dialogue if  building resumes after the Sept. 26 expiration of the  moratorium.

Obama earlier condemned as “senseless slaughter” an ambush  on Tuesday by the Islamist Palestinian group Hamas that killed  four Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank and vowed that  “extremists and rejectionists” would not derail peace efforts.

In an attack coinciding with Obama’s inauguration of the  summit, suspected Palestinian gunmen wounded two Israelis in  the West Bank yesterday.
Obama concluded a flurry of personal diplomacy hosting  Netanyahu, Abbas, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Jordan’s  King Abdullah at a White House dinner before the formal start  of direct Israeli-Palestinian talks at the State Department today.

The summit marks Obama’s riskiest plunge into peacemaking,  not least because he wants to forge a deal within 12 months, a  timeframe considered a long shot by most analysts.

Striking a conciliatory tone before the dinner, Netanyahu  called Abbas “my partner in peace” and pledged to seek an end  to the conflict “once and for all.”

But Netanyahu also underscored Israel’s demands that any  final peace deal include security arrangements to ensure a  future Palestinian state, which he says must be demilitarized,  would not become an “Iranian-sponsored terror enclave.”

Abbas pressed Netanyahu to freeze all “settlement activity”  and said the “time has come” to make peace, end Israeli  occupation and establish a Palestinian state. He also condemned  the latest militant violence in the West Bank.