
WASHINGTON –  The US pushed back against indications Israel has abandoned its commitment to  take down authorized outposts Thursday, calling on Jerusalem to live up to its  obligations.
“The Israeli government has pledged to take specific  actions,” US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said. “They have  responsibilities and we would expect them to fulfill those  responsibilities.”
Earlier this week, The Jerusalem Post reported  that Israel has no intention in the foreseeable future of dismantling any of 23  unauthorized West Bank outposts built after March 2001, despite a 2002 road map  commitment and years of pledges by successive prime ministers including Binyamin  Netanyahu.
The promise to dismantle the outposts was made in the  framework of wider understandings with the second Bush administration that  provided for continued home-building at settlements Israel is likely to retain  under a permanent accord with the Palestinians.
Israeli officials told  the Post that since the Obama administration replaced those wider  understandings with a demand for a moratorium on all new home-building  throughout the settlements – which was accepted by Netanyahu in November –  Israel no longer regards itself as having to go through with the outpost  demolitions on the basis of that pledge to the US.
Crowley, though,  indicated the US sees the matter differently since it believes Israel still  needs to keep its commitment.
He also said that “the parties need to take  affirmative steps that create an improved atmosphere for negotiations to proceed  and they need to avoid actions which inhibit progress, and certainly settlements  are a contentious issue.”
He added that settlements, along with borders,  security, refugees and Jerusalem, were final-status issues that needed to be  resolved in those negotiations.
“We’re pushing hard to get them into proximity talks as soon as possible that we  hope will lead to direct negotiations,” Crowley said.
State Department  officials, however, are denying a report in a Roger Cohen column in The New  York Times this week that the US administration had presented the  Palestinians with a letter promising an intense effort to produce a Palestinian  state in two years, accompanied by a pledge – if Israel seriously undermines  trust between the two parties – to withhold its veto from a Security Council  resolution condemning Israel.
Instead, they pointed to building momentum  and US Middle East envoy George Mitchell’s plans to return to the region at the  beginning of next week.