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Barack Obama said the US and Jordan both wanted Israelis and Palestinians to go back to the negotiating tableUS President Barack Obama has said it is "more vital than ever" for Israelis and Palestinians to restart negotiations on a peace deal.
The president was speaking after a meeting in Washington with Jordan's King Abdullah II, kicking off a week of intense Middle East diplomacy.
Mr Obama will also meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week.
President Obama is scheduled to make a speech on the implications of the Arab uprisings on Thursday.
Renewing talks Speaking at the White House on Tuesday, Mr Obama said Jordan would work as a partner to resolve the relationship between Israel and the Palestinians.
The president said Jordan's king agreed that "because of the many changes that have been taking place in the region, it's more vital than ever that both Israelis and Palestinians find a way to get back to the table".
President Obama said negotiations were more vital than ever because of changes taking place in the Arab world. But he gave no indication of how the US was hoping to restart the process.
If President Obama does have a plan to get the Israelis and Palestinians back to the negotiating table he is unlikely to share it before his speech about the region on Thursday at the State Department.
In that address he will have to discuss not only the stalled Israeli-Palestinian talks, but also articulate US policy towards the Arab world - a region in flux where each country has elicited a different US approach.
But after the resignation of its Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell last week, it is thought that this administration has opted for conflict management rather than conflict resolution.
If President Obama does have a plan to get the Israelis and Palestinians back to the negotiating table he is unlikely to share it before his speech about the region on Thursday at the State Department.
In that address he will have to discuss not only the stalled Israeli-Palestinian talks, but also articulate US policy towards the Arab world - a region in flux where each country has elicited a different US approach.
But after the resignation of its Middle East peace envoy George Mitchell last week, it is thought that this administration has opted for conflict management rather than conflict resolution.
Mr Obama added that Israel and the Palestinians should "begin negotiating a process whereby they can create two states living side by side in peace and security".
The diplomacy comes after renewed violence in the region. Funerals are due to be held in Palestinian refugee camps in southern Lebanon following the deaths of 12 people on Sunday in demonstrations on Israel's borders.
Meanwhile, the Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas made a fresh appeal on Tuesday for international recognition of an independent Palestinian state.
Writing in The New York Times newspaper, Mr Abbas said Palestinians "cannot wait indefinitely" for their own state.
He wants the United Nations General Assembly to vote in September for an independent Palestine.
But Mr Netanyahu is scheduled to address a joint meeting of the US Congress during his visit to Washington, and reports suggest he will argue against the Palestinian bid.
Talks between Israel and the Palestinians and have been frozen since last year because of a dispute over settlements.
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