Two-state solution in Israel’s interest – Tzipi Livni

Agence France-Presse

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Livni: The only way to keep Israeli values as a democratic state is by adopting the idea of two states for two people

LIVNI SPEAKS. Israeli Justice Minister and chief negotiator with the Palestinians Tzipi Livni arrives to address the 4th National J Street Conference in Washington on September 28, 2013. AFP/Nicholas Kamm

WASHINGTON DC, USA – Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, who heads the Israeli team in peace talks with the Palestinians, said late Saturday, September 28, in Washington that a two-state solution was in her country’s best interest.

“The only way to keep Israeli values as a democratic state is by adopting the idea of two states for two people,” one for Israelis and the other for Palestinians, Livni said at a conference held by J Street, a leftist pro-Israel lobbying group.

“The words Israel and peace are not in contradiction, they must live together,” she said.

Yet “so do two other words: peace and security.”

“We live in a tough neighborhood, and even after a peace agreement is reached it will be and remain a tough neighborhood.”

Israel, Livni added, is not the only country that sees “the grave threat” coming from Iran or from radical fundamentalist Islam in the region.

“We have common interests with other Islamic and Arab states,” she said.

These countries “feel like us that these are threats,” but “feel they cannot express this shared interest because we have this ongoing existing conflict between us and the Palestinians,” Livni said.

Peace talks between Palestinians and Israelis were officially re-launched in July with support from US Secretary of State John Kerry.

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas on Thursday, September 26, speaking before the UN General Assembly, demanded that any peace deal with Israel be permanent, calling new US-brokered talks a “last chance.”

Separately, Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu left for New York early Sunday in a bid to challenge Iran’s “charm offensive,” and the view that the country is less of a nuclear threat under its new, more moderate president. – Rappler.com

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