Clinton urges mid-East deal with 'last chance' warning

THE US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton sought to inject urgency into Israeli-Palestinian peace talks yesterday with a warning that the negotiations may be "the last chance for a very long time" to reach an agreement.

In an unusual joint interview with Israeli and Palestinian television broadcasters a day after she presided over the launch of the first direct talks in two years, Mrs Clinton said the rise of Iranian-backed extremist ideology in the Middle East was a major reason why time was short.

Iran's suspected nuclear ambitions have surfaced as a new motivating factor for a Middle East resolution. There have been growing Israeli warnings that the nation might take military action to blunt Iran's nuclear programme, and even some of Israel's Arab neighbours have shown concerns.

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The administration believes that a successful Middle East peace deal would limit Iran's ability to use tensions in the region to justify its behaviour.

"I think that time is not on the side of either Israeli or Palestinian aspirations for security, peace and a state," Mrs Clinton said. Iranian-sponsored "rejectionist ideology" and a "commitment to violence" by those opposed to peace make reaching an agreement quickly all the more necessary, she said.

"The United States," she added, "wants to weigh in on the side of leaders and people who see this as maybe the last chance for a very long time to resolve this."

Shortly before the interview, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad dismissed the peace talks, saying "the fate of Palestine will be decided in Palestine and through resistance and not in Washington".

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Iran supports the Palestinian militant group Hamas, the controlling authority in the Gaza Strip. Gaza along with the West Bank is supposed to form an eventual Palestinian state. Hamas also rejected the talks this week.

The Obama administration wants a peace deal concluded within a year. Despite early positive signals from Israeli and Palestinian leaders, hopes for an agreement rest on overcoming major obstacles and decades of hostility and suspicion.

The Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas will meet for a second round of talks in Egypt on September 14-15