Kerry said at a news conference yesterday in Bogota that he has talked about the announcements with the top Israeli negotiator. He is also trying to reach Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is recovering from hernia surgery.
A State Department spokeswoman in Washington, Marie Harf, said that the U.S. Had expressed its "serious concerns" about the announcement Sunday that Israel had approved building nearly 1,200 more settlement homes Sunday all the third in a week.
Top U.S. Negotiator Martin Indyk has arrived in the region for talks that begin on Wednesday. Palestinian officials already have complained about the settlement announcement, even as Israel released more than 100 Palestinian convicts as part of the deal to resume peace talks.
Kerry said the U.S. Government views the settlements as illegitimate. He added that criticism on the Palestinian side shows the need to get negotiations going quickly.
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"I think that what this underscores, actually, is the importance of getting to the table and getting to the table quickly and resolving the questions with respect to settlements, which are best resolved by solving the problems of security and borders," Kerry said.
Kerry urged both parties not to react adversely or to provoke either side, but to move forward quietly, carefully and deliberately to negotiate the major issues.
"With the negotiation of major issues, these kind of hot point issues ... Are eliminated as the kind of flash points that they may be viewed today," he said.
Kerry, on his first trip to Colombia as secretary of state, met yesterday with Colombian officials negotiating with the nation's largest guerrilla army to find peace in the South American country for the first time since 1964.
Disclosures by National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden could chill talks on several fronts. Those include trade, energy, counter narcotics, and discussions about the Oct. 23 state dinner that President Barrack ABM is hosting for Brazil's president, Dilemma Rousseau.