Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas discussed with Jordan’s King Abdullah II an American proposal to hold a new five-party meeting with Israel, according to a Palestinian official.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told the German news agency that Washington had proposed holding a meeting that would include the Palestinian Authority and Israel, along with Jordan, Egypt and representatives of the US administration.
The official did not specify the proposed date or place for the encounter, but said that the American endeavor was aimed at restoring bilateral contacts between the Palestinian and Israeli sides, and ensuring the intervention of regional parties to enhance cooperation and reduce tension in the Palestinian territories.
According to the official, the Palestinian leadership has not provided a final answer regarding the proposal, and wants to consult with the Jordanian and Egyptian sides, in light of its insistence on guarantees regarding Israel’s commitment to the outcomes of such talks.
Abbas and his senior aides met with the Jordanian monarch in Amman, where they “reviewed bilateral relations and common issues, as well as the latest political developments,” the official Palestinian News Agency reported. The meeting came two days after the Israeli cabinet convened to discuss providing facilitations for the Palestinian Authority, upon American request.
Israeli media reports stated that the head of the Israeli General Security Service (Shin Bet), Ronen Bar, met, on Monday, with the Secretary of the Executive Committee of the PLO, Hussein Al-Sheikh. But the latter denied the claims.
Meanwhile, Jordan’s King Abdullah II warned of the danger of the continued absence of a political horizon for resolving the Palestinian issue, and its repercussions on security and stability in the entire region, stressing the necessity to stop all illegal unilateral Israeli measures.
During his talks with Abbas, the Jordanian king said that the international community must provide protection for the Palestinian people, and deploy concerted efforts to find a political horizon that would re-launch serious and effective negotiations to resolve the Palestinian file on the basis of the two-state solution.