15 Kasım 2010 Pazartesi

The FP Morning Brief: Netanyahu presents new settlement freeze plan to Israeli Cabinet

Monday, November 15, 2010
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Netanyahu presents new settlement freeze plan to Israeli Cabinet

Top story: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed for a new 90-day settlement moratorium in a meeting of the Israeli Cabinet on Sunday. The new proposal comes after intensive talks between Netanyahu and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who met for almost eight hours in New York on Thursday to discuss the terms of the deal.

In return for the freeze, which would not include settlement construction in East Jerusalem, the Israelis would receive 20 advanced U.S. fighter jets and other military aid, as well as a U.S. pledge to block Palestinian attempts to work through the United Nations or other international bodies to achieve statehood. Specifically, the United States would veto any U.N. Security Council resolution that affirmed international recognition of a Palestinian state.

Obama administration officials also promised that this would be their last request for a settlement moratorium. They are hoping that this current proposed moratorium can buy enough time for the sides to make progress delineating the borders between the two states. By clarifying which settlements would be ceded to Israel in any final agreement, and which land would be given to the Palestinians in return, the administration is hoping to convince the Palestinians to drop their demand for a settlement freeze in the future.

The vote on the proposal in the Israeli Cabinet is expected to be close, but analysts expect it to pass by a slim margin.

Released opposition figure challenges Burmese junta: Immediately after being released from more than seven years of house arrest, Aung San Suu Kyi drew a crowd of thousands at a rally.


Asia

  • The Obama administration will present its most detailed plan yet to end combat operations in Afghanistan by 2014.
  • South Korea said that defections from North Korea have increased significantly in recent years.
  • India's parliament rejected an inquiry into a scandal involving the sale of cellular phone licenses, causing an uproar.

Middle East

  • Muslim pilgrims on the hajj began their trek up Mount Arafat today, one of the most important events of the pilgrimage.
  • Lebanese police arrested a radical Sunni Muslim cleric after a military court sentenced him to life in prison last week.
  • Iran said that the seizure of an alleged Iranian arms shipment in Nigeria was a "misunderstanding" that had been resolved.

Europe

  • French President Nicolas Sarkozy replaced his foreign minister and defense minister in a major Cabinet reorganization.
  • Ireland rejected European Union offers of a bailout package for the country's distressed economy.
  • Greek's budget deficit was 15.4 percent of its GDP last year, significantly worse than the previously reported figure of 13.6 percent of GDP.

Americas

  • The death toll from the cholera outbreak in Haiti topped 900.
  • The Cuban government freed the first of 13 dissidents who had been arrested since 2003, despite the fact that he has refused to go into exile.
  • Costa Rica declared victory in a border dispute with Nicaragua following a resolution by the Organization of American States calling for a withdrawal of troops from the area.

Africa

  • South Sudan leader Salva Kiir told southern Sudanese to sign up to vote "en masse" in the upcoming referendum on granting the region full independence.
  • The Israeli Cabinet approved a plan to allow 8,000 Ethiopians of Jewish descent into the country.
  • In Guinea, hundreds gathered to protest the results of the country's contested presidential election.
-David Kenner

ANCHO GOSH/AFP/Getty Images



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