US commitment to Jewish state's security rock solid: Clinton

Dunya News

The American commitment to Israel's security is rock solid and unwavering, says Clinton.

 

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in Jerusalem on Tuesday during Israel s conflict in Gaza that Washington s commitment to the Jewish state s security remains "rock solid."

 

The top US diplomat flew in for talks with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as efforts continued across the region to refine an elusive accord to end a week of violence that has cost 136 Palestinian and five Israeli lives.

 

The Israeli army confirmed its first fatality from rocket attacks on Tuesday, and a defence ministry official was also killed, while another missile landed harmlessly just south of Jerusalem on a day of continued strikes from Gaza.

 

The unrelenting violence also claimed the lives of 26 more Palestinians and witnessed an Israeli strike on a Gaza City building that houses foreign media organisations including AFP -- the third such strike in three days.

 

Clinton told Netanyahu -- a right-winger who has had strained relations with US President Barack Obama s administration in the past year -- that Washington s commitment to Israeli security was "rock solid and unwavering." But she also stressed that this "is why we believe it is essential to de-escalate the situation" in the Palestinian territory.

 

Clinton further indicated that any truce announcement may not emerge until after she completes visits to the West Bank capital of Ramallah and Cairo for talks with Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi.

 

"In these days ahead, the United States will work with our partners here in Israel and across the region for an outcome that bolsters security for the peace of Israel, improves conditions for the people of Gaza and moves toward a comprehensive peace for all people of the region," said Clinton.

 

Optimistic negotiators had initially said a deal could be announced in Cairo later Tuesday following days of negotiations brokered by Egypt s new Islamist leadership. "There will be a joint press conference between Hamas and Islamic Jihad and the Egyptian mediators tonight to announce the truce," an Islamic Jihad source told AFP in Gaza City. A Hamas source separately backed up the report.

 

But Hamas later said in a statement that there was no truce accord, stressing that it could only be announced by Egypt and calling on Palestinian armed groups to "continue to riposte against Israel s crimes." And an Egyptian official told AFP in Cairo that "the truce announcement is not expected tonight because we are still waiting for a response" from the Jewish state.

 

A meeting was held between Egypt s intelligence chief Rafat Shehata and top-level delegations from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, but it wound up with no agreement being reached on a ceasefire, a source close to the discussions told AFP in Cairo.

 

"Hamas and Islamic Jihad told the Egyptians they weren t in a hurry, and it was Israel that had asked Egypt for a truce," the source said.

 

"Hamas says it has not yet received a reply from Israel and asks all the media not to rush. It is the Egyptian presidency that will announce a truce if an accord is reached. Any declaration before that, or different from that, is irresponsible." An Israeli diplomatic source told AFP that negotiations were ongoing.

 

"We are working very hard using our diplomatic channels. We are working continuously. But I cannot give you an estimated time of arrival (of a truce)," the source said. The bloodshed meanwhile showed no signs of abating as the military pressed on with its bombardment of northern Gaza positions from which most of the militants  rockets have been launched.

 

Netanyahu told Clinton he was ready to agree to a "long-term solution" as long as the rocket attacks from Gaza stopped. "If there s a possibility of achieving a long-term solution for this problem by diplomatic means, we prefer it. But if not, I m sure you understand that Israel will have to take every action necessary to defend its people," he said.

 

A senior Hamas official told AFP in Cairo that a key sticking point was whether Israel would begin easing its six-year-old blockade of Gaza coinciding with the truce or at a later date. "A compromise solution is for there to be agreement on lifting the siege, and that it would be implemented later at a specified time," he said.