Kerry says Israeli-Palestinian deal possible by end-April
TEL AVIV, Israel
Palestinian sources said Allen, a former commander of U.S. troops in Afghanistan, had drawn up plans to allow a continued Israeli military presence for the next 10 years in the Jordan Valley - along the eastern border of any new Palestinian state.Israel says its troops have to remain there to prevent arms and militants from entering the West Bank and launching attacks. Abbas has rejected the idea, but said he would accept seeing U.S. troops deployed along the border."We are working on an approach that both guarantees Israel's security and fully respects Palestinian sovereignty," Kerry said, without giving further details.Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said after Kerry's visit "we want to achieve a peace based on Israel's withdrawal from lands occupied in 1967"."We won't accept limiting Palestinian sovereignty over our land," Erekat added, in comments to al Arabiya television.Palestinians also question whether Israel will press ahead with the third tranche of a planned release of Palestinian prisoners.Seen as a vital confidence-building measure, Israel has so far freed about half the 104 prisoners it had pledged to let out of its jails under a deal secured by Washington in July. Kerry said the third tranche would go ahead on December 29.Kerry has made nine visits to the region since taking office in February in a relentless campaign to gain momentum and bridge a vast gulf of mutual mistrust."We remain hopeful that we can achieve that final-status agreement. Why? Because we are absolutely confident ... that for both sides, and the region at large, peace can bring enormous benefits," Kerry said.He left Israel later on Friday, bound for Vietnam and the Philippines.
(Additional reporting by Noah Browning in Ramallah; Writing by Crispian Balmer; Editing by Alistair Lyon and Alison Williams)