WASHINGTON: Secretary of State John Kerry is finalizing his team to help shepherd Middle East peace talks and take on the heavy lifting on a day to day basis, a US official said Monday.
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki would neither confirm nor deny reports that a former US ambassador to Israel, Martin Indyk, has been chosen to head up the American negotiating team.
In Amman on Friday — at the end of his sixth trip to the region — Kerry announced that Israeli and Palestinian leaders have agreed in principle to return to talks that have been frozen for three years.
Israeli chief negotiator Tzipi Livni and her Palestinian counterpart Saeb Erakat are due to travel to Washington in the coming days to start the talks. “This is the first time in years the official negotiators for both sides have publicly agreed to meet at this level,” Psaki told reporters.
But she could not give a precise date for the resumption of talks, saying US officials had been “in touch with both parties over the course of the last couple of days, but I don’t have an update on the logistics of the date yet.”
“Right now we are pursuing the way forward. There has been a great deal of work, compromise and sacrifice leading to this point,” Psaki said.
But she stressed she was going to respect Kerry’s commitment to keep the details of the negotiations secret in order to give them the best chance of succeeding. The top US diplomat was now “focused on putting together the right combination of players to work with the parties,” she said, adding no decision on a negotiator or envoy had been made.
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