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Netanyahu offers 'to build trust' Netanyahu offers 'to build trust'
(20 minutes later)
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has spoken by telephone with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has proposed a series of "trust-building measures" to revive peace talks with the Palestinians.
Mr Netanyahu clarified Israel's construction policy in East Jerusalem and proposed "trust-building measures" with the Palestinians, his office said. Mr Netanyahu outlined the steps in a telephone call with the US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, although details have not yet been made public.
This represented "a real effort by Israel to aid the US administration in renewing negotiations" which have been stalled for more than a year, it added. His office said they represented a "real effort" to aid US peace efforts.
Mrs Clinton will attend a Middle East Quartet meeting in Moscow on Friday. Washington presented him with several demands last week after the approval of plans for new homes in East Jerusalem.
Earlier, Russia's foreign minister said representatives would "search for ways out of the current dangerous impasse in the peace process". The Israeli leader's offer comes a day before Mrs Clinton attends a meeting in Moscow of the Middle East Quartet - the US, EU, UN and Russia.
The Palestinians said it would be very difficult to hold the indirect "proximity talks" after the decision by the municipal authorities in Jerusalem last week to expand the settlement of Ramat Shlomo, while US envoy George Mitchell postponed a trip to the region. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov earlier said representatives would "search for ways out of the current dangerous impasse in the peace process".
Mitchell visit
The Palestinian Authority has said it will be very difficult to hold indirect "proximity talks" with Israel in the wake of the announcement that 1,600 new housing units would be built in the East Jerusalem settlement of Ramat Shlomo.
In a telephone call last Friday, Mrs Clinton asked Israel's prime minister to agree to a number of US demands, reportedly including a halt to construction in East Jerusalem and a commitment to substantive negotiations with the Palestinians.
Mr Netanyahu did not respond until Thursday evening, when he is said to have "clarified" Israel's position on Jerusalem and conveyed a detailed list of steps he was willing to take in order to revive the peace process.
Mr Netanyahu's office said the steps represented "a real effort by Israel to aid the US administration in renewing negotiations though trust-building measures with the Palestinian Authority".
The Washington Post earlier reported that the Israeli leader would tell Mrs Clinton that he could not cancel the Ramat Shlomo expansion plan, but would assure her that it would not happen "any time soon".
The newspaper was told by the Israeli ambassador to the US that Mr Netanyahu would also promise not to publicise further construction plans for Jerusalem.
The Palestinian Authority has refused to resume direct talks with Israel because of its refusal to put a stop to the expansion of settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
In November, Israel announced a 10-month suspension of new building in the West Bank, under heavy US pressure. But it considers areas within the Jerusalem municipality as its territory and thus not subject to the restrictions.
Close to 500,000 Jews live in more than 100 settlements built since Israel's 1967 occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem. They are illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.