Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (r.) shakes hands with US Middle East envoy George Mitchell during their meeting in Jerusalem Tuesday. Mitchell emerged from talks with Netanyahu on Tuesday without a deal on a Jewish settlement freeze but he said they had made "good progress". Dan Balilty/REUTERS
From Christian Science Monitor:
During Mitchell's visit, activists set up 11 outposts. A report said the number of Israelis living in the West Bank has surpassed 300,000.
Jerusalem - US Mideast envoy George Mitchell wrapped up three days of talks here on Tuesday, heralding "good progress" in his meetings with Israeli officials. But he made no mention of a much anticipated agreement on the most visible point of contention in recent weeks and a key issue for Arabs: freezing settlement construction in the West Bank.
One of the main goals of Mr. Mitchell's visit, part of a regional trip that includes stops in Arab Gulf states later this week, had been to get Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to agree to stop the expansion of settlements – a move President Obama sees as a jumping-off point to getting Israeli and Palestinian leaders to agree on a two-state solution. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has said that he will not return to talks with Israel unless such a freeze is instituted.
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Update: Telling Israel No: Obama's Bold Move -- New York Times
My Comment: The Israelis are not going to limit their settlement growth. The Arabs understand this, but the U.S. is still operating on hope.
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