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Jewish protesters gather in Lafayette Park across from the White House in Washington, Tuesday, July 6, 2010, as President Barack Obama met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Jewish protesters gather in Lafayette Park across from the White House in Washington, Tuesday, July 6, 2010, as President Barack Obama met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday during a carefully choreographed White House makeup meeting that was short on details that they would press for a quick resumption of direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

At a picture-taking session with Netanyahu, Obama said he hoped that direct Middle East talks could begin “well before” Israel’s moratorium on new West Bank settlements expires in September. He called on Israelis and Palestinians to take confidence-building steps to prepare the ground, but he gave few specifics.

“The president and I discussed concrete steps that could be done now — in the coming days, in the coming weeks — to move the peace process further along in a very robust way,” Netanyahu said.

Obama made Middle East peace a priority on taking office, but he has struggled to show progress. The tone at Tuesday’s meeting suggested that he has discarded his tactic of public confrontation with Israel, after it backfired.

The meeting was orchestrated down to the smallest detail to project an image of an untroubled U.S.-Israeli alliance, an image with potential political benefits for the president and other Democrats in November’s midterm elections.

Obama even signaled, albeit in diplomatic code, that his drive for nuclear nonproliferation doesn’t extend to Israel’s unacknowledged nuclear arsenal.

“We strongly believe that, given its size, its history, the region that it’s in and the threats that are leveled . . . against it, that Israel has unique security requirements,” he said.

The tone and atmospherics could hardly have been more different from Netanyahu’s last visit to Washington in March, when the president declined even to have his picture taken with the prime minister. The administration was smarting from the embarrassment two weeks earlier, when an Israeli announcement of construction of 1,600 apartments for Israelis in disputed east Jerusalem upstaged what was to be a fence-mending trip by Vice President Joe Biden.

Tuesday’s one-on-one session lasted an hour and 19 minutes and was followed by a working luncheon attended by the administration’s top brass, including Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, national-security adviser James Jones, special adviser Dennis Ross and U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice.

Still, it’s far from certain that the president’s warmer approach to Israel will result in progress toward Middle East peace.

Netanyahu is under intense pressure from members of his right-wing coalition at home not to extend the moratorium on new settlement construction in the West Bank to east Jerusalem.

Obama’s outreach to Israel follows a recent pattern of smoothing over differences with allies. Afghan President Hamid Karzai was feted during a May visit to Washington after months of mutual recriminations.

It also brings potential domestic political benefits. White House officials were to brief major American Jewish groups by telephone Tuesday evening.

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