Israel's leader denies crisis with US (AP)
Saturday, May 21, 2011 9:01 PM By dwi
WASHINGTON – Israel's leader, disagreeable to defuse reports of a crisis with the U.S. over his rejection of President Barack Obama's planned formula for resuming Israeli-Palestinian pact talks, said Sat that media accounts of the difference hit been "blown artefact discover of proportion."
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had bluntly criticized Obama's call early this hebdomad to humble forthcoming negotiations on Arabian statehood on Israel's boundaries before it captured the West Bank, easterly Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 Mideast war. He publicly reiterated that opposition while movement beside Obama in the Oval Office on Friday.
On Saturday, Netanyahu stood concern by his insistence that Zion could not stop to its prewar lines, negotiate with a Arabian polity including violently anti-Israel Hamas militants or repatriate millions of Palestinians to homes in Zion that they or their families fled or were unvoluntary from during the fighting over Israel's 1948 creation.
But he told The Associated Press that media accounts of the disagreements "have been panting artefact discover of proportion."
"It's genuine we hit some differences of opinion, but these are among friends," Netanyahu said.
In a Mideast policy style on Thursday, Obama gave unexampled prominence to Washington's long-held stand on the forthcoming borders of Zion and a Arabian state.
An essential conception of what Obama planned was that Israelis and Palestinians would also hit to agree to realty swaps that would earmark Zion to hold on to major Jewish settlements, a saucer Netanyahu unsuccessful to name when he proclaimed the 1967 lines to be "indefensible."
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