OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas warned in comments published on Monday that “all options are open” if the US fails to restart Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. The comments, Abbas' first since US Secretary of State John Kerry announced last week that peace talks may resume for the first time in five years, may be an attempt to exert pressure on the US and Israel to meet Palestinian demands on the terms of formal negotiations. Israeli and Palestinian representatives are to hold preliminary talks in Washington soon. There, the sides are to work out the final details of what Kerry portrayed as broad agreement on the framework for restarting peace talks that collapsed in 2008. Abbas did not name his other options, but referred to last year's upgrade of the Palestinian status at the UN. At the time, the General Assembly accepted a state of Palestine in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem — lands Israel captured in 1967 — as a non-member observer state in a largely symbolic gesture. Palestinian officials have said that in the absence of negotiations with Israel, they would seek further UN recognition, including membership in UN agencies and possible redress against Israeli policies at the International Criminal Court. Israel fears that the Palestinian could make further gains in international bodies and use those positions to act against the Jewish state. In an interview with Al Ra'i, Jordan's largest pro-government daily, Abbas portrayed last year's UN recognition as “the most important achievement for the Palestinian state in the past years.” — AP