Jordan's King warns of fresh Middle East conflict

23 May, 2011

The prolonged stalemate in the Middle East peace process could lead to another conflict in the region if it continues, Jordan's King Abdullah II warned in an interview broadcast Sunday. "I just have a feeling that we're going to be living with the status quo for 2011. Whenever we accept the status quo, we do so until there is another war," Abdullah II told ABC television's "This Week."
"If you look to the past 10 years, every two to two-and-a-half years, there is either the intifada or a war or a conflict," he said, referring to the Palestinian uprising. "So looking back over the past 12 years, my experience shows me that if we ignore the Israeli-Palestinian issue, something will burst."
He spoke after a tense White House meeting between President Barack Obama and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during which the Israeli leader rejected Obama's outlines for a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians.
Netanyahu then proceeded to lecture Obama in front of television cameras about the failings of "peace based on illusions."
In a major policy speech Thursday, Obama called for the borders of Israel and a future Palestinian state to be based on territorial lines in place before the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, with mutually agreed land swaps to frame a secure peace.
Abdullah said the image of the United States in Jordan had suffered "because of its perceived lack of ability to move the Israeli-Palestinian process forward."
Peace talks have been largely on ice since 2008, and "it's going to be the Arabs and Israelis (who) are going to pay the ultimate price" for the lack of progress, he added.

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