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Israel

Syria and Israel may restart talks

December 17, 2009 14:30

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

Israel and Syria are inching back to the negotiation table, although both sides are still not quite ready to sit down. In a number of statements in recent weeks, leaders and senior officials of both countries have indicated that they are open to resume talks that took place while Olmert was prime minister.

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu told the Knesset Foreign and Defence Affairs committee last week that he received messages through French President Nicolas Sarkozy that the Syrians are willing to resume peace talks and are not insisting that Israel agree first to retreat from the Golan Heights. Mr Netanyahu also said that he preferred to continue using the French as a go-between instead of the Turkish government, which has recently engaged in a series of anti-Israel measures.

Faisal Makdad, the Syrian deputy foreign minister responded in an interview saying that Syria still insists on using the Turkish channel and continues to hold that Israel must retreat to the pre-1967 border lines — but Israeli diplomatic sources still say that “both sides are edging back to the negotiations”.

IDF Military Intelligence Chief Major General Amos Yadlin said this week in a lecture that “Syria is currently firmly rooted in its alliance with Iran and Hizbollah, but this is not the natural place for Syria to be and we believe that they can be removed from the radical axis, and it is certainly in Israel’s interest to do this.”

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