Israel has proposed annexing 6.8 per cent of the illegally occupied West Bank, the chief Palestinian negotiator has said in his first detailed comments about the stalled US-backed negotiations.
Israel proposed a swap of some of its own territory in return for the annexed area but the Israeli land was not equal trade in size and quality, Ahmed Qureia said, adding that the Palestinians rejected the offer.
Tel Aviv has also said it would allow 5,000 Palestinian refugees to return to the territories as part of the plan to take the land in the West Bank, Qureia said on Friday.
The latest 'peace efforts' were launched a year ago at a US-hosted conference in Annapolis, Maryland, where George Bush, the US president said he wanted to see a deal by the end of his presidency in January 2009.
Qureia's comments came before Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, was due to meet Bush at the White House next week.
'No mass return'
Palestinian negotiators are not looking for the right of return of all refugees and their descendants, a group of several million people, Qureia said.
"To say that not a single refugee would be allowed back or that all the refugees should be allowed back is not a solution," he said.
"We should reach a mutual position on this issue."
Israel has said in the past that it will not accept large numbers of Palestinians, arguing that mass repatriation would ruin the Jewish character of the state.
Qureia said that Israel wishes to retain four blocs of Jewish settlements - Ariel, Maaleh Adumim, Givat Zeev and Efrat-Gush Etzion which sit inside the West Bank.
But Israel has so far not aired its position on the future of Jerusalem, the most contentious issue in the negotiations, he said.
"What is interesting to note is that these comments are old and new at the same time. What Qureia was probably trying to do ... was probably nudge the Israeli politicians back into mainstream rhetoric," Nour Odeh, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the West Bank city of Ramallah, said.
"There has been an increase in radical statements by Israeli politicians, including Tzipi Livni, who was Qureia's main partner in negotiations this year.
"She has made a few statements about the status of negotiations that have infuriated Palestinians, including her thoughts about Palestinian Israelis and that they should go to the Palestinian state once that is established."
The Israeli government did not immediately comment on Qureia's comments.
Election contest
Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, has in the past said that Israel would have to give up some Arab neighborhoods of Jerusalem.
However, the Orthodox Jewish Shas Party has said it will pull out of the coalition government if Jerusalem is even discussed in negotiations.
Israel is set to hold a general election on February 10, while the US is preparing for the inauguration of Barack Obama, the country's president-elect.
Olmert will step down as prime minister after a successor is selected and has already been replaced by Tzipi Livni as head of the ruling Kadima party.
Abbas is also facing a leadership challenge from Hamas, who hold de facto control of Gaza after routing forces in June 2007 to the president and Fatah leader.
Hamas has said that Abbas's term in office ends in January but he insists that the presidential election should be held alongside legislative elections in 2010.
'Threat to talks'
Benjamin Netanyahu, leader of the right-wing Likud party, is leading Livni in opinion polls in the run-up to the Israeli election.
Netanyahu, who is against territorial concessions, has said he would not continue the current negotiations with the Palestinian Liberation Organization, which have stalled in recent months.
Netanyahu, if elected, may try to seek to put an end to the negotiations, Qureia said.
"There is a possibility that if Netanyahu wins, he will begin things from the point of zero," Qureia said, adding that there is no joint written record of the negotiations.
But Qureia also noted that during a term as prime minister in the 1990s, Netanyahu signed two interim agreements with the Palestinians.
"Therefore, a person in the position of responsibility could change contrary to his position in the opposition,'" Qureia said.
"At the end of the day, we'll deal with anyone who wins the election."
PHOTO CAPTION
Israeli soldiers stand guard after a Palestinian youth was shot by Israeli troops in the West Bank city of Hebron, Friday, Dec. 12, 2008.
Al-Jazeera