The major topic of the evening was Abbas' reluctance to advance from proximity talks, brokered by the United States, to direct talks with Israel. Both Obama and Netanyahu favor direct talks.what benefit is there to still claim Abbas is a Moderate? He has no power. He is not sincere about his words.
Palestinian leaders had previously said the obstacle was Israel's refusal to advance from a partial to a total settlement freeze, but Abbas backed away from that reasoning, and instead stuck to a "legalistic" argument, in the word of several of those present: He wanted direct talks, but only after proximity talks had achieved progress on the "core issues," of borders, Jerusalem and refugees.
Essentially Abbas wants Israel to play to his demands to flood and drown Jews with Jew Killers before he talks
On the issue of incitement, Abbas accepted that there was some incitement in official Palestinian media, according to meeting participants. However, he expressed frustration that Israel did not recognize his efforts to end incitement in the mosques, saying he was the only Arab leader to centralize Friday sermons and to remove imams who incited against Israel.
I don't have a problem with a free media. I have a problem with the Palestinian Authority. It was the PA that was naming streets and buildings after murderers.
Abbas repeated his call for a trilateral commission, comprising Israel, the Palestinian Authority and the United States, that would examine and penalize incitement on both sides of the conflict, and expressed frustration that Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had rejected the idea.
Penalize both sides? Sounds like a Goldstone Report. Why would Israel agree to not protecting itself?
Jewish leaders also pressed him on reaching out to Israelis to reassure them of Palestinian intentions.
On that score, Abbas said he recognized the ancient Jewish claims to Israel, and recognized west Jerusalem as Israel's capital, adding that the Palestinians had an equal claim to eastern Jerusalem as their capital. He said he had appeared on Israeli television for a 30-minute interview, and had pressed Netanyahu to do the same on Palestinian TV; Netanyahu declined.