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Photo: EPA
US VP Pence
Photo: EPA

VP Pence: timing of Trump peace plan depends on Palestinians

With White House reportedly not being in touch with Palestinian leadership since before President Trump's Jerusalem move, US VP Pence says ME peace initiative depends on the return of Palestinians to negotiations.

US Vice President Mike Pence said on Tuesday the timing of a long-awaited US Middle East peace initiative depended on the return of Palestinians to negotiations.

 

 

President Donald Trump's advisers have been working on the outlines of a plan for some time. But Palestinians ruled out Washington as a peace broker after the US president's December 6 recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

 

"The White House has been working with our partners in the region to see if we can develop a framework for peace," Pence told Reuters in an interview in Jerusalem on the last leg of his three-day Middle East trip. "It all just depends now on when the Palestinians are going to come back to the table."

 

US VP Pence and his wife, on their departure from Israel (Photo: EPA)
US VP Pence and his wife, on their departure from Israel (Photo: EPA)

 

Trump's Jerusalem move angered the Palestinians, sparked protests in the Middle East and raised concern among Western countries that it could further destabilize the region. Palestinians see east Jerusalem as capital of a future state.

 

An unnamed White House official spoke to reporters in Jerusalem and revealed senior White House staff have not been in touch with Palestinian leadership since before President Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital.

 

The official also noted his hope was that the plan would be unveiled in 2018, but he declined to commit to a timeline, saying both sides had to be ready for it. It was the US's job, he said, to make sure it is fair.

 

The anonymous official further stated that no other country believes the US-led peace process can be replaced, and said he does not think Palestinians believe that either—despite senior Palestinian officials including President Mahmoud Abbas rejecting further American involvement in negotiations.

 

Lastly, he said he hoped the peace plan will spill into the broader region, helping create ties between Israel and its neighbors.

 

PA President Abbas (Photo: AP)
PA President Abbas (Photo: AP)

 

Pence said in the interview that he and the president believed the decision, under which the United States also plans to move its embassy to Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, would improve peacemaking prospects.

 

Pence discussed the Jerusalem issue during talks with Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Saturday and Jordan's King Abdullah on Sunday. He said the two leaders had agreed to convey to the Palestinians that the United States was eager to resume peace talks.

 

"We want them (the Palestinians) to know the door is open. We understand they're unhappy with that decision but the president wanted me to convey our willingness and desire to be a part of the peace process going forward," Pence said.

 

Asked if the Egyptians and Jordanians had agreed to pressure the Palestinians to return to talks, Pence said: "I wouldn't characterize it as that."

 

Pence a 'strong supporter of PM Netanyahu'

Pence said the US State Department would spell out details in the coming weeks about a plan to move the US embassy to Jerusalem by the end of 2019.

 

Israeli media have speculated that a 2019 embassy move could help Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu win reelection in a vote scheduled for November of that year.

 

PM Netanyahu and his wife Sara, on their departure to Davos, Switzerland (Photo: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO)
PM Netanyahu and his wife Sara, on their departure to Davos, Switzerland (Photo: Amos Ben Gershom/GPO)

 

Pence said he admired Netanyahu's leadership and appreciated his friendship. Asked if he hoped for the prime minister's reelection, Pence said: "I'm a strong supporter of Benjamin Netanyahu, but I don't get a vote here."

 

The vice president also pressed European leaders to heed Trump's call to forge a follow-up agreement to the Iran nuclear deal established under President Barack Obama's administration.

 

"At the end of the day, this is going to be a moment where the European community has to decide whether they want to go forward with the United States or whether they want to stay in this deeply flawed deal with Iran," he said.

 

Asked if he thought the United States would succeed in getting that kind of agreement with its European allies, Pence said: "We'll see."

 

Trump said earlier this month the United States would withdraw from the agreement unless its flaws were fixed.

 


פרסום ראשון: 01.23.18, 19:04
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