Diplomats must take a fresh look at the moribund Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in the hopes of reviving the negotiations after March elections in Israel, the EU's foreign policy chief said Tuesday, according to AFP.
"What I'm afraid of is that on one side the lack of process is in itself something that is deteriorating the situation," Federica Mogherini said at the Brookings Institution.
"But on the other side, I'm also worried about the fact that a process that has gone on for so long, if we just restart the process and that's it, it might not be enough," she added.
Mogherini suggested one way forward would be to enlarge the Middle East Quartet steering the negotiations.
Set up in Madrid in 2002, the body is composed of the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia. Former British prime minister Tony Blair acts as its special envoy in mediating a peace deal between the two sides.
"The sense of frustration, the lack of hope, is so strong on both sides, that we need not only to restart the process but ... make sure that the process brings some immediate concrete results," Mogherini said.
"We need to build this international frame and restructure it more to restart the efforts that John Kerry was very well doing last year," Mogherini said, referring to the American Secretary of State’s efforts to achieve peace, which ended when the Palestinian Authority (PA) applied to join international treaties in breach of the conditions of the talks.
Enlarging the Quartet "could be helpful" as it would it enable talks on not just the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but also the broader Arab-Israeli conflict, said Mogherini.
There could be "an opportunity to work on a common security basis in the region between Israel and some of the Arab countries," she added, highlighting the role played by Egypt in ending the Gaza war last year.
Arab countries were also playing a "positive role" in fighting militants from the Islamic State group, so that could bring an "added value to enlarge the scope of the" peace process, Mogherini said.
She stressed however that it was so far only being thought about, adding that "it's not for the coming weeks."
Later, the envoys could "maybe start preparing the framework for what could be done in a couple of months time, hopefully."
Envoys from the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia are to meet later this month to discuss the next steps to address the Israeli-Palestinian crisis.
The gathering of the Middle East diplomatic quartet will take place January 26 in Brussels to discuss ways of reviving the peace process.
Since bringing about the end of the last round of peace talks, the PA has been engaged in a series of unilateral moves.
One move was a resolution presented to the UN Security Council which would have set a 12-month deadline for Israel to reach a final peace deal with the PA and called for a full Israeli withdrawal from Judea and Samaria by the end of 2017. The move failed as the Security Council did not pass the resolution, with the PA falling one vote short.
The PA followed up the move at the Security Council by applying to join the International Criminal Court (ICC) and threatening to file complaints of war crimes against Israel. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has announced that the PA will join the ICC on April 1.