Israel PM rejects ‘international dictates’ ahead of meeting with French diplomat


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JERUSALEM // Israel’s prime minister said on Sunday he will “fiercely reject” any international proposals meant to bring about a solution to the conflict with the Palestinians.

Benjamin Netanyahu made the remarks ahead of a visit by French foreign minister Laurent Fabius. France has said it will propose a resolution in the United Nations Security Council with a framework for negotiations toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“The way to reach an agreement is only through negotiations and we will fiercely reject attempts to impose international dictates,” he told cabinet.

Mr Netanyahu said that attacks against Israelis will continue with any international proposal that does not take Israel’s security concerns into account.

Mr Fabius is coming to the region to sound out leaders about a planned Security Council resolution that aims to restart peace talks after a more than year-long lull.

Palestinian officials and French diplomats have said the proposal would call for basing the borders between Israel and a future Palestinian state on the lines that existed before Israel captured the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza Strip during the 1967 war.

It also would set a two-year deadline for an agreement. Israel rejects a return to its pre-1967 lines, saying they are indefensible. It also opposes deadlines.

Two decades of talks brokered mainly by the United States have failed to produce a two-state solution.

The latest peace push, led by US secretary of state John Kerry, fell short in April 2014 after nine months of tense negotiations and the gaps between Israeli and Palestinian positions remain vast.

* Associated Press