Originally published Tuesday, September 22, 2009 at 12:11 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print
Share
Mideast meet anchors Obama's 12 hours of diplomacy
No one in the White House, the Israeli government or among Palestinian officials is publicly predicting a breakthrough out of the three-way Mideast meeting that President Barack Obama is hosting here. And yet the session Tuesday is seen as a crucial step for Obama.
AP White House Correspondent
No one in the White House, the Israeli government or among Palestinian officials is publicly predicting a breakthrough out of the three-way Mideast meeting that President Barack Obama is hosting here. And yet the session Tuesday is seen as a crucial step for Obama.
After seeing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas separately, Obama is bringing the two together for the first Israeli-Palestinian meeting since Netanyahu took office in March. Taking place on the sidelines of this week's annual U.N. General Assembly here, just the fact that the meeting is scheduled is big news.
Even if little more than a photo opportunity, it will probably be the most-watched portion of a marathon day of international diplomacy for Obama, a 12-hour sprint through many high-profile global problems and disputes.
In addition to the three-way Mideast talks, Obama meets the Chinese president at a fraught time in the Washington-Beijing relationship; plays luncheon host, as America's first black president, to sub-Saharan African leaders for talks on boosting opportunities for young people in their poverty-stricken nations; delivers key speeches to former President Bill Clinton's Global Initiative and to a U.N. heads-of-state session on the stalled issue of climate change; and ends the day with a U.N.-sponsored leaders dinner.
The Israeli-Palestinian sit-down wasn't announced until Saturday and comes with the two sides still far apart on what it would take to resume peace talks that broke off in 2008.
U.S. envoy George Mitchell failed last week to bridge the gap between the two sides on the issue of Jewish settlements in Palestinian territory, putting the long hoped-for three-way meeting in doubt. Obama has asked Israel to freeze all settlement construction, a condition for Abbas to resume negotiations. But Israel has only committed to a partial halt.
Still, the sides decided to go ahead, even though Obama is considered unlikely to resolve the settlement showdown and announce a relaunching of peace talks.
"We have no grand expectations out of one meeting," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said.
One reason to have the meeting is the need to get momentum going.
"The U.S. wants to and the U.S. needs to negotiate in public," said Jon Alterman, a senior fellow in Middle East policy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former State Department official in President George W. Bush's first term. "There's a perceived need for the U.S. to visibly be involved in making progress on Arab-Israeli issues."
Obama opens his day with brief remarks to a climate summit convened by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. As an opener for Wednesday's main General Assembly meetings, Ban invited all leaders to the climate summit, hoping to generate political momentum for crucial talks in Copenhagen in December on a new global treaty to curb global warming.
Over 100 leaders plan to attend, the largest number ever to discuss climate change.
![]()
Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said Obama will "reaffirm the U.S. commitment to addressing the challenge" - something he hasn't done previously before what she called "the entire global audience."
Yet Obama appears before fellow leaders with little to show in his own country on the issue so important to him. A source of great disappointment about Obama in Europe, a House bill to limit greenhouse gas emissions was passed in June but has languished in the Senate and probably won't go anywhere until next year, if at all.
"Clearly, the road is rough ahead," Rice said. "But I think it is significant that you will have many heads of state ... all together and seriously addressing this problem."
With Chinese President Hu Jintao, Obama has a full plate.
A little more than a week ago, the president penalized China, citing thousands of lost U.S. jobs when slapping punitive tariffs on all Chinese-made tire imports. Though the move appears unlikely to spark a trade war, it infuriated China at a time when Obama wants Beijing's help on climate change and nuclear standoffs with Iran and North Korea.
As a veto-holding member of the U.N. Security Council, China's support is crucial for getting new sanctions against Iran's suspected nuclear weapons program. That topic is especially timely given the upcoming Oct. 1 talks between Iran and an international group that includes the U.S. and China.
China also is the world's third-largest economy, and is participating in the Group of 20 meetings Obama is hosting later this week in Pittsburgh on the economic crisis.
Others states' fights bring focus to Daniels
NEW - 07:13 AM
South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is writing memoir
Bill would make jail mug shots available
Immigration, license bill voted down in state Senate
Rival Texas bills require sonograms before abortions

"Iron Man 3" kicks off a summer blockbuster season that will see hundreds of speeding, squealing, exploding, airborne, rolling and smoking vehicles in...
Post a comment
- McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
- No question: Russell Wilson's in charge now
- Percy Harvin already impressing Seahawks teammates, coaches
- Amazon’s plan for giant spheres gets mixed reaction
- Sinking Mariners lose sixth straight game; changes ahead?
- Man shot by FBI had ties to Boston bombing suspect
- Is Catholic Church taking over health care in Washington? | Danny Westneat
- Turmoil surrounds program to help prostitutes
- Ex-Great Wolf Lodge lifeguard charged with rape of guest, 14
- High-level Starbucks exec heads to Kohl’s
- Is Catholic Church taking over health care in Washington?
367 - Official: Treasury played no role in IRS targeting
321 - Vote on gay Scouts comes at emotional moment
149 - Mariners head home facing key decisions as losing streak hits six
129 - McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
125 - Mariners veterans call team meeting after getting routed again
87 - Mariners option Jesus Montero to AAA, all but ending catching career
84 - Mariners routed by Angels again, 7-1
76 - Bridge collapses on Interstate 5 over Skagit River; cars in the water
56 - First shoe drops: Montero headed to Tacoma
55
- Is Catholic Church taking over health care in Washington? | Danny Westneat
- McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
- Amazon’s plan for giant spheres gets mixed reaction
- Catholic schools update to compete with charter schools
- Careers carved at wood-tech center
- Doctors save Ohio boy by ‘printing’ an airway tube | Close-up
- Food-video site launched by Bellevue consumer-research firm
- UW Medicine, Catholic health system to have ‘strategic affiliation’
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Council panel OKs zoning for big pot-growing operations







