English Story

奥巴马会见中东领导人

US President Barack Obama will urge his Palestinian counterpart Mahmoud Abbas to drop a bid for UN recognition of statehood later on Wednesday.

本周三晚些时候,美国总统奥巴马将敦促巴勒斯坦总统阿巴斯放弃联合国承认其国家地位的要求。
  Mr Obama wants a resumption of direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians
Mr Obama wants a resumption of direct talks between Israel and the Palestinians
 
Mr Obama will also meet Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu amid frantic(疯狂的) diplomacy aimed at averting a crisis.
 
The US president has vowed to veto the bid, backing Israel's view that direct talks offer the only route to peace.
 
But efforts by US, European, Russian and UN mediators have yet to produce guidelines for the resumption of talks.
 
The last round of talks broke down a year ago.
 
Mr Abbas is set to launch the statehood bid on Friday, after his address to the United Nations General Assembly, with a written request to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
 
But Mr Obama will ask him not to push for a vote in the Security Council, where the US has promised a veto, to give the "quartet" of mediators time to produce a statement that would be the basis for resumed peace negotiations.
 
"With both the Israelis and the Palestinians, the president will be able to say very directly why we believe action at the United Nations is not the way ... to achieve a (Palestinian) state," deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters.
 
'Two states'
 
The quartet aims to give the two sides a year to reach a framework agreement, based on Mr Obama's vision of borders fashioned from Israel's pre-1967 boundary, with agreed land swaps.
 
The statement would also endorse the idea of "two states for two peoples, Jewish and Palestinian", according to the AP news agency.
 
However, UK Foreign Secretary William Hague acknowledged there had as yet been no progress.
 
And Mr Obama's stance has come under fire from Republican opponents.
 
Texas Governor Rick Perry said: "The Obama policy of moral equivalency, which gives equal standing to the grievances(抱怨,不平) of Israelis and Palestinians, including the orchestrators of terrorism, is a dangerous insult."
 
Both Mr Netanyahu and Mr Abbas have said they are prepared to engage in direct talks. But Mr Abbas has so far appeared determined to press ahead with the statehood bid.
 
If his request is approved by Mr Ban, the Security Council would then examine and vote on it. In order to pass, the request must get the votes of nine out of 15 council members, with no vetoes from the permanent members. The US has said it will use its veto.