Netanyahu pledges to seek peace with Palestinians

Israeli prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu said today his government would negotiate peace with the Palestinians but…

Israeli prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu said today his government would negotiate peace with the Palestinians but made no mention of their US-backed quest for statehood.

In a speech a day after enlisting the centre-left Labour Party into a broad-based administration that could help him avoid friction with Washington over peacemaking, Mr Netanyahu focused on his plans to shore up the Palestinian economy.

He told legislators from his right-wing Likud party, in separate remarks, that he planned to present his new government for parliamentary approval next week, a spokeswoman said.

The vote, she said, would likely be held on Monday or Tuesday. Under a mandate from Israel's president, Mr Netanyahu has until April 3rd to form a government.

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"If we have a strong Palestinian economy, that's a strong foundation for peace," Netanyahu said in a speech to a business forum, pledging to remove some "bureaucratic handicaps" stunting growth.

The Palestinian Authority and the United States have long urged Israel to ease restrictions on the movement of Palestinian people and goods in the occupied West Bank, where the Israeli military maintains a network of checkpoints.

"I think that the Palestinians should understand that they have in our government a partner for peace, for security and for rapid economic development of the Palestinian economy," he said.

"This means that I will negotiate with the Palestinian Authority for peace," Mr Netanyahu added, describing an "economic track" as a complement to political talks in an apparent bid to ease any international concerns he might not seek a peace deal.

Asked about Mr Netanyahu's comments, a spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, said the incoming Israeli government "must be committed in an explicit manner, without ambiguity, to the two-state solution".

But Mr Netanyahu has shied away from declaring support for the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, alongside Israel, an objective US President Barack Obama reaffirmed yesterday in Washington.

But under the coalition deal with Labour, led by Defence Minister Ehud Barak, Likud agreed to respect all of Israel's international agreements - a formula that includes accords envisaging Palestinian statehood.

Indirect acceptance of that goal and formation of a broad government that includes Labour, the moving force behind interim peace deals with the Palestinians in the 1990s, might keep Mr Netanyahu off a possible collision course with Mr Obama.

Mr Netanyahu is widely expected to finalise his government in the next few days and ask parliament to ratify it next week.

On Monday, he sealed an agreement with the Orthodox Jewish Shas party, a perennial member of coalitions of right and left down the years. He had already signed up the Yisrael Beitenu party led by ultranationalist Avigdor Lieberman.

But while enlisting those partners, Mr Netanyahu made clear he preferred a broad-based coalition.

A sharp turn to the right within Israel's government could raise international concern already heightened by Mr Netanyahu's promise to appoint Mr Lieberman as foreign minister.

There appeared to be little chance the ruling centrist Kadima party, which won 28 seats to Likud's 27 in the February 10th election, would agree at the last-minute to join up.

Reuters