Politics Weigh Heavily in Trumps Middle East Peace Plan

  • 1/26/2020
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A blueprint the White House is rolling out to resolve the decades-long Palestinian-Israeli conflict is as much about politics as it is about peace. President Donald Trump said he would likely release his long-awaited Middle East peace plan a little before he meets Tuesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his main political rival Benny Gantz. The Washington get-together offers political bonuses for Trump and the prime minister, but Trumps opponents are doubting the viability of any plan since theres been little-to-no input from the Palestinians, who have rejected it before its release, reported The Associated Press. “Its entirely about politics,” Michael Koplow, policy director of the Israel Policy Forum, said about Tuesdays meeting. “You simply cant have a serious discussion about an Israeli-Palestinian peace plan and only invite one side to come talk about it. This is more about the politics inside Israel and inside the US than it is about any real efforts to get these two sides to an agreement." Jared Kushner, a Trump adviser and the presidents son-in-law, has been the architect for the plan for nearly three years. He has tried to persuade academics, lawmakers, former Middle East negotiators and special interest groups not to reject his fresh approach outright. People familiar with the administration’s thinking believe the release will have benefits even if it never gets Palestinian buy-in and ultimately fails, said the AP. According to these people, the peace team believes that if Israeli officials are open to the plan and Arab nations do not outright reject it, the proposal could help improve broader Israeli-Arab relations. Trump, for his part, told reporters on Air Force One this week that “Its a plan that really would work.” He said he spoke to the Palestinians “briefly,” without elaborating. Nabil Abu Rdeneh, a spokesman for the Western-backed Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, says thats not true. “There were no talks with the US administration — neither briefly nor in detail," he said. “The Palestinian position is clear and consistent in its rejection of Trump’s decisions regarding Jerusalem and other issues, and everything related to the rejected deal.” The Palestinian Authority cut off ties with US officials in late 2017, after the Trump administration recognized Jerusalem as the Israeli capital. That US move, which reversed decades of policy, sent shockwaves through the region and was followed by other moves seen as favoring Israel. Since then, Palestinians have said, Washington lost any claim to being an honest broker. Moreover, Washington has recognized Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967; it stopped referring to the West Bank as "occupied" territory; and it no longer considers Israeli settlements there as inconsistent with international law. The Palestinians view the settlements as illegal and a major obstacle to peace, a position shared by most of the international community. Tuesdays meeting offers benefits to both leaders while they are under fire at home. The meeting allows Trump to address a high-profile foreign policy issue during his impeachment trial, while Democrats are arguing for his ouster. Moreover, if the plan is pro-Israel as expected, Trump hopes it will be popular with his large base of evangelicals and maybe sway a few anti-Trump Jewish voters his way. According to AP VoteCast, a nationwide survey of the American electorate, 79% of white evangelical voters in the 2018 midterms approved of the job Trump was doing as president, while 74% of Jewish voters disapproved. Pastor John Hagee, founder and chairman of the 8 million-member Christians United for Israel, said in a statement that Trump "has shown himself to be the most pro-Israel president in US history, and I fully expect his peace proposal will be in line with that tradition.” For Netanyahu, the meeting allows him to shift press coverage Tuesday when Israels parliament convenes a committee that is expected to reject his request for legal immunity from charges of fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes. “The ‘Trump peace plan’ is a blatant attempt to hijack Israel’s March 2 election in Netanyahu’s favor," tweeted Anshel Pfeffer, a columnist for Israels Haaretz newspaper and the author of a biography of Netanyahu. Netanyahu is fighting for his political survival ahead of the election. The decision to bring Gantz along is likely aimed at forestalling any criticism that the US administration is meddling in the election. But in Israel, the meeting and the unveiling of the plan will be widely seen as a gift to the prime minister. The prime minister has noted that it was his idea to invite Gantz, putting his rival in a position where he could not say no to a meeting that could make him look like a bystander at the White House event. In Congress, Trumps announced release of his Middle East plan has caused hardly a ripple against the backdrop of the impeachment drama. Asked on Friday what he thought about the expected rollout, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said: “Im on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and weve not heard anything about it.” Sen. Jim Risch, R-Idaho, the committee chairman, defended the administrations work on a plan. “I think the people who are working on this are working on this in good faith," Risch said in the halls of Congress, shortly before Trumps impeachment trial resumed. “I think the people who are trying to do it really are acting in good faith, hoping they can come up with a solution.”

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