Donald Trump says US not committed to two-state Israel-Palestine solution
Donald Trump has dropped a two-decades old
US commitment to the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside Israel as
part of a permanent Middle East peace agreement.
Speaking at a joint press conference with the
Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, the US president did not rule out a
two-state solution but implied his administration had no preference when it
came to the final geography of the region as part of a permanent Middle East
peace agreement.
Asked what he thought about a two-state
solution on Wednesday, Trump said: “I’m looking at two-state and one-state and
I like the one that both parties like. I’m very happy with the one that both
parties like,” he said.
Trump’s comments dismantled one of the key
pillars of the US-led peace efforts since before the signing of the Oslo
accords, which envisioned the creation of a Palestinian state alongside the
Jewish one.
“The United States will encourage peace and
really a great peace deal,” the US president said. “We will be working on it
very, very diligently. But it is the parties themselves who must directly
negotiate such an agreement.
“To be honest, if Bibi [Netanyahu] and the
Palestinians, if Israel and the
Palestinians are happy – I’m happy with the one they like the best.”
In an otherwise effusive welcome for his
Israeli ally, Trump used the occasion to deliver a mild rebuke to Netanyahu on
the pace of settlement construction, suggesting that it would be one of the
compromises necessary to strike a deal.
“I’d
like to see you pull back on settlements for a little bit,” he said.
The Israeli government has said it plans to
build approximately 6,000 Jewish settlement housing units in the West Bank ,
signalling a surge in planned construction since Trump was sworn in as
president in January.
Netanyahu shrugged off Trump’s comment, gave
no such undertaking, and insisted that settlements were “not the core of the
conflict”.
Trump castigated the Palestinians for
teaching their children to “hate” Israel. But he continued to put off his pledge to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem ,
a constant demand of the US and Israeli right, while insisting it was being
considered very carefully.
And while there was tough talk from both men
on Iran, Trump did not repeat earlier threats to “dismantle” the international
nuclear deal agreed with Tehran in 2015.
At their first meeting since Trump’s
election, both leaders expressed the hope that Arab states could be brought in
to helping forge an enduring Israeli-Palestinian agreement that has eluded the
region for 70 years, suggesting that those states were more amenable and
friendly to Israel because of a shared fight against “radical Islamic terror”
and Iranian influence.
Most long-term observers of the region have
argued that the chance of Arab states in the Middle East giving up the goal of
an sovereign Palestinian state was close to nil.
Neither Trump and Netanyahu, speaking before
they had substantive talks, sketched out what the alternative to a two-state
solution would look like – a shared non-denominational state of Jews and Arabs,
or an enlarged Jewish state with a non-voting Palestinian population living in
annexed territory.
The seemingly casual abandonment of a pillar
of US Middle East policy caught Palestinians by surprise.
President Mahmoud Abbas called on Israel to
agree to Trump’s call to refrain from settlement-building, and stressed his
administration’s commitment to the two-state solution which would “establish
[a] Palestinian State with East Jerusalem as its capital.”
Senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat
warned that undermining the long-standing strategy was no joke.
“We
want to tell those who want to bury and destroy the two-state solution that the
real alternative to a Palestinian state living alongside an Israeli one on the
1967 lines is a democratic, secular state where Jews, Christians and Muslims
can live together,” he said.
Emerging from a meeting with the speaker of
the UK parliament, John Bercow , in Jericho, he added: “Those who believe they can
leave the two-state solution and replace it with one state and two systems, I
don’t believe they can get away with it. It is impossible. I believe
undermining the two-state solution is not a joke and that would be a disaster
and tragedy for Israelis and Palestinians.”
But Trump’s comments were seized on by the
leader of Israel’s pro-settler Jewish Home party who hailed it as a “new era”.
In a tweet, Naftali Bennett said the “Palestinian flag was removed from the
staff and replaced with an Israeli flag”.
In a speech in Cairo, UN secretary general
António Guterres warned against abandoning the two-state solution. “There is no
alternative solution for the situation between the Palestinians and Israelis,
other than the solution of establishing two states, and we should do all that
can be done to maintain this,” he said.
George W Bush gave the first formal US
backing for the idea of a two-state solution in 2002, although the concept had
been the unspoken goal of the latter part of the Clinton administration before
that.
The 2003 peace “road map” envisaged an independent
Palestinian state as part of a final status agreement and successive Israeli
prime ministers from Ariel Sharon to Ehud Olmert tacitly or explicitly accepted
it. Netanyahu embraced the concept at a speech at Bar-Ilan University in June
2009.
A former US ambassador to Israel, Daniel
Shapiro, said that the change in US rhetoric might help Netanyahu navigate
short-term coalition politics but added, in a tweet, “It will be hard to tap
dance there for long” as neither the Palestinians nor the Arab states in the
region could accept a “walkback” from the two-state solution.
Trump used the White House stage to put on a
show of familial warmth and affability with Netanyahu. Both men patted and
rubbed each other’s backs as the Israeli prime minister arrived. Melania Trump
had flown from her home in New York to act as hostess for Sara Netanyahu, and
the Israeli leader voiced appreciation from the podium of Trump’s son-in-law
and adviser, Jared Kushner.
The event was a respite for two men under
intense pressure at home. Trump leads a dysfunctional administration, having
been forced to fire his national security adviser , Michael Flynn,
the day before the Israeli prime minister’s arrival.
He faces ever more intense questioning about
contacts with Moscow the day after news reports said US intelligence had
intercepted conversations between his campaign aides and Russian intelligence
officials during the election campaign, which the Kremlin tried to hard to skew
in Trump’s favour. The president called on conservative media during the joint
press conference who spared him questions on the issue.
Netanyahu is meanwhile facing a corruption
investigation and an unruly coalition back home. But on Wednesday he could bask
in the praise of a US president who twice promised “a lot of love”. It was a
world away from the testy and largely taciturn, relationship he had with Barack
Obama.
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