Israeli cabinet considers US plan

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu today presented his cabinet with a US plan that would extend a freeze on West Bank …

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu today presented his cabinet with a US plan that would extend a freeze on West Bank settlements for 90 days in return for diplomatic and security incentives.

Washington wants Israel to renew a freeze on building settlements so that talks can resume with Palestinians, who walked out of negotiations after just a few weeks in September when Israel refused to extend a 10-month settlement freeze.

Under the US proposal, if Israel extended the freeze Washington would pledge not to seek further extensions and to veto any attempts at the United Nations to force a unilateral peace settlement. US security aid to Israel would also be upgraded.

"I will insist that in any proposal Israel's security needs will be addressed, both in the immediate term and regarding the threats facing us in the coming decade," Mr Netanyahu said in public comments before the cabinet meeting.

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The prime minister has previously said any settlement moratorium will not apply to areas around East Jerusalem that Israel captured during a 1967 war and the Palestinians want as the capital of a future state.

US secretary of state Hillary Clinton shared the plan with Mr Netanyahu at a meeting last week, a diplomatic source said.

A spokesman for Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas said there had been no official word regarding a renewed Israeli freeze on housing starts in the occupied West Bank.

"An official Palestinian commitment will come only after President Abbas hears officially from the American administration what is going on between them and the Israelis," said Nabil Abu Rdainah.

Under the US plan, Israel would declare a further, three month suspension of construction in the West Bank, land it captured in a 1967 war where Palestinians seek a state. Any building launched since the original moratorium ended late in September would be frozen, the diplomatic source added.

Among the pledges offered to Israel by Washington was a guarantee to veto any resolutions brought to the United Nations Security Council that seek "to impose a political settlement on Israel," the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The US would also undertake to veto resolutions deemed anti-Israel in the United Nations and other international organisations, a move that could make Israel less vulnerable to threats made by some Palestinians to declare statehood unilaterally in the event that peace talks fail.

The Obama administration would also ask Congress to approve the supply of three billion dollars worth of advanced warplanes to Israel "to maintain its qualitative edge" in the region, the source added.

The United States would further sign a more comprehensive deal to enhance its substantial security aid to Israel as part of any agreement concluded with the Palestinians.

Reuters