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Lieberman in Berlin

ch/pfd/nrt, rtr/dpa/AFPMay 7, 2009

While in Berlin, Israel's foreign minister has left a cloud over the Mideast peace process, calling it a waste of money.

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Avigdore Lieberman, with Berlin flag behind.
Lieberman has been making his first official visit to BerlinImage: AP

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman has left German parliamentarians pessimistic about the future of the Middle East peace process.

In Berlin, the last stop of his four-day European tour, the right-wing minister refused to commit to a two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinian Territories.

Lieberman (right) with the much taller Ruprecht Polenz, Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee
Lieberman (right) with Ruprecht Polenz, chairman of the Foreign Affairs CommitteeImage: ap

During talks with members of the German parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee Lieberman said the peace process had been little more than a waste of money. He also brought up Iran, saying the country was a major threat.

Later in the day, Lieberman paid his respects at Berlin's Holocaust memorial, laying a wreath at the 19,000-square-meter monument in the center of Berlin.

Lieberman later held talks with German Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, followed by dinner with his German counterpart Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

Germany's top diplomat urged the controversial Israeli foreign minister to adopt a two-state plan as the basis for peace in the Middle East and the "sole path to peace and security."

Steinmeier emphasized that the German government expected the new Israeli administration under prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu would abide with previous peace commitments.

The German minister said it was important to stregthen moderate forces in the region and actively involve them in the peace process.

With regard to the situation in the Gaza Strip, Steinmeier said it was imperative that Palestinians had access to aid supplies.

The Israeli foreign minister, who heads a nationalist party in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition, caused a stir on his first day in office, when he announced that Israel was no longer bound by the so-called Annapolis peace process, which formed the basis of the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks in 2008.

Lieberman's European visit - which has included meetings in Rome, Paris and European Union talks in Prague - was mostly conducted out of the media eye. In Berlin, no joint press conference or photo call was scheduled for his meeting with Steinmeier.

This echoed Lieberman's reception in France, where Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner chose not to hold a joint press conference as had been customary when Lieberman's predecessor Tzipi Livni came to Paris.