Advertisement

  Stock Sponsor
Click here for full stock listings


Published: November 3, 2009 3:00 a.m.

Clinton dismisses notion of Israeli tilt

Associated Press

To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.

Advertisement

MARRAKECH, Morocco – Trying to mute Arab criticism that the Obama administration had retreated from its tough stance on Israeli settlements, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Monday softened her praise for Israel’s offer to restrain new housing in Palestinian areas.

While Israel was moving in the right direction in its offer to restrict but not stop the settlements, Clinton said, its offer “falls far short” of U.S. expectations.

Clinton said her earlier praise of Israel’s offer, during a stop in Jerusalem, had been intended as “positive reinforcement.”

But her comment drew widespread criticism from Persian Gulf ministers who interpreted it as a U.S. drawback on settlements, which have been the main obstacle to a resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

In a sign of U.S. eagerness to calm Arab concerns, Clinton is extending her trip by one day to fly to Cairo to meet with President Hosni Mubarak on Wednesday, her staff announced. She had been scheduled to return to Washington today.

During a photo-taking session Monday with her Moroccan counterpart, Clinton was asked by a reporter about the Arab reaction, and she responded by reading from a written statement that appeared designed to counter the skepticism about the Obama administration’s views on settlements.

“Successive American administrations of both parties have opposed Israel’s settlement policy,” she said. “That is absolutely a fact, and the Obama administration’s position on settlements is clear, unequivocal and it has not changed. As the president has said on many occasions, the United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements.”