US Jewish leaders urge Netanyahu to resume peace talks

140 signatories commend PM for understanding "painful compromises" needed for peace.

Kerry and Netanyahu meeting 370 (photo credit: Matty Stern/US Embassy Tel Aviv)
Kerry and Netanyahu meeting 370
(photo credit: Matty Stern/US Embassy Tel Aviv)
WASHINGTON  — A broad range of US Jewish figures wrote Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to encourage him as peace talks restart.
“We recognize that achieving a two-state solution will require a territorial compromise that provides for a Palestinian state without jeopardizing Israel’s security,” said the letter, initiated by the Israel Policy Forum and signed by 140 leaders of religious groups, donors, and former luminaries of both the Republican and Democratic parties.
“That is why we applaud your understanding that one must be ‘willing to make painful compromises to achieve this historic peace,’” it said.
Since agreeing to US Secretary of State John Kerry’s appeal to restart talks, Netanyahu has said that such compromise is necessary. One of Netanyahu’s top deputies, Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz, on Thursday told the British Daily Telegraph that a "demilitarized" Palestinian state was “the only possible solution” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
It is not clear yet whether the Palestinians are ready to drop preconditions, among them Israel freezing settlement expansion, before starting talks.
“It is our hope that President Mahmoud Abbas will be similarly prepared to make the difficult decisions that achieving an agreement will require,” the letter said of the Palestinian Authority leader.
Among the signatories were some of Israel’s most stalwart supporters in recent Congresses and governments, including Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.) whose Senate term expired last year.