State Department says Kerry comments seeming to suggest connection between West Bank construction and stabbing spree misinterpreted
WASHINGTON — The US State Department distanced itself on Wednesday from claims that Secretary of State John Kerry had linked what he described as a “massive increase in settlements” to the current outbreak of violence plaguing Israel. But it reiterated Kerry’s message delivered a day earlier that Israel’s settlement policy was distancing the possibility of achieving a two-state solution.
State Department spokesman John Kirby told reporters that Kerry had not been “trying to affix…blame for the recent violence” during a Tuesday evening address at Harvard University, when the secretary told his audience that “there’s been a massive increase in settlements over the course of the last years and there’s an increase in the violence because there’s this frustration that’s growing.” The two ideas, Kirby suggested, were not meant to be interpreted causally.
Rather, Kirby said, Kerry was merely listing “the challenges that are posed on both sides by this absence of progress towards a two-state solution.” Kerry’s statement, Kirby explained “highlighted our concern that current trends on the ground, including this violence, as well as ongoing settlement activity, are imperiling the viability of eventually getting to a two-state solution.”... Read More: Times of Israel