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Blinken says US opposes anything that puts two-state solution ‘further from reach’ after violence in Jerusalem

The United States will “continue to oppose anything” that puts a two-state solution “further from reach” after one of the bloodiest months in the West Bank and East Jerusalem in several years, the US secretary of state has said.

Antony Blinken said the US opposes Israeli settlement expansion and any moves towards the annexation of the West Bank.

The US secretary of state has been speaking in a news conference in Jerusalem on the second day of a two-day visit to Israel where he has met with the country’s leader Benjamin Netanyahu and the Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas.

His comments come days after two shootings, one by a Palestinian gunman and another by a Palestinian teenager, left seven people dead and five wounded in Jerusalem.

Meanwhile, some 35 Palestinians have been killed in fighting, including 10 who were killed in an Israeli military raid in the flashpoint town of Jenin last Thursday.

Mr Blinken said today: “The horrific terror attacks in Jerusalem, the escalating violence in the West Bank, have underscored the significant challenges to security and stability that the region faces and that we face.

“A rising tide of violence has resulted in the loss of many innocent lives on both sides… all sides must take steps to prevent further escalation of violence and restore calm.”

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He continued: “It’s President Biden’s firm conviction that the only way to achieve (peace) is through preserving and then realising, the vision of two states for two peoples.

“The United States will continue to oppose anything that puts that goal further from reach.

“Including, but not limited to, settlement expansion, legalisation of illegal outposts, moves towards annexation of the West Bank, disruption to the historic status quo of Jerusalem’s holy sites.”

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