The Phnom Penh Post

Trump calls for ‘compromise’ in Middle East, but it won’t be easy

- Jerome Cartillier and Sarah Benhaida

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump called on Israelis and Palestinia­ns to make compromise­s for peace yesterday as he wrapped up a closely watched visit, but offered no specifics on how he would resolve the decades-old conflict.

In a speech toward the end of his visit to Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s, Trump offered a forceful defence of the Jewish state and pledged to protect the country against common enemies, including Iran.

But he also touched on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, again vowing he was “personally committed” to helping the two sides reach a deal.

After weeks earlier flashing his trademark bravado by saying the “ultimate deal” could be easier than “people have thought”, he seemed to acknowledg­e the complexiti­es that have bedevilled his predecesso­rs.

“Making peace however will not be easy,” Trump told an audience of Israeli politician­s and other dignitarie­s at the Israel Museum. “We all know that. Both sides will face tough decisions. But with determinat­ion, compromise and the belief that peace is possible, Israelis and Palestinia­ns can make a deal.”

However. he offered no specifics on how he planned to make progress in resolving the conflict, with widespread scepticism over whether meaningful talks are possible for now.

In what may concern peace advocates, he did not specifical­ly mention the two-state solution, long the focus of internatio­nal efforts and US Middle East diplomacy.

The parts of the speech offering a robust defence of Israel drew loud applause, which seemed to energise Trump on the second leg of his first foreign trip since taking office.

After mentioning threats to Israel from Hezbollah, Hamas and Iran, he said, “not with Donald J Trump”, drawing enthusiast­ic applause.

“I like you too,” Trump said when the audience quieted.

Trump’s speech came after he met Palestinia­n President Mahmud Abbas in Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank earlier in the day.

On Monday, he met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem, and he was due to depart for Rome later yesterday.

Trump also laid a wreath and spoke at a ceremony at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem yesterday.

The visit follows an initial leg in Saudi Arabia, where he urged Islamic leaders to confront extremism.

Abbas had sought to convince the unpredicta­ble US president to remain committed to an independen­t Palestinia­n state.

Trump had arrived in Bethlehem by motorcade, crossing a checkpoint at Israel’s controvers­ial separation wall, and was greeted by Abbas and other dignitarie­s outside the city’s presidenti­al palace. Abbas reiterated his call for a two-state solution to the conflict, including a Palestinia­n state with east Jerusalem as its capital.

“We are ready to open dialogue with our Israeli neighbours to build confidence and create a real opportunit­y for peace,” he said after talks with Trump.

Bethlehem holds deep significan­ce as the site where Christians believe Jesus was born and welcomes thousands of pilgrims each year for Christmas.

A banner hung in the city said “the city of peace welcomes the man of peace” along with photos of Abbas and Trump.

Their talks came with hun- dreds of Palestinia­ns in Israeli jails on hunger strike since April 17, which Abbas referred to in his remarks after meeting Trump.

On Monday, Palestinia­ns also held a general strike in support of the prisoners.

Clashes broke out near a checkpoint between Jerusalem and Ramallah involving several hundred stone-throwing youths and Israeli soldiers who responded with rubber bullets and tear gas, leaving at least one wounded.

The most high-profile moment of Trump’s stay in Jerusalem was his visit to the Western Wall, one of the holiest sites in Judaism. He became the first sitting US president to visit the site in the Israeli-annexed east of the city. He was not accompanie­d by any Israeli leaders during the visit.

Allowing them to do so could have led to accusation­s that Washington was implicitly recognisin­g Israel’s unilateral claim of sovereignt­y over the site, which would break with years of US and internatio­nal precedent.

The status of Jerusalem is ultra-sensitive and has been among the most difficult issues in Israeli-Palestinia­n peace talks, stalled since April 2014.

Israel occupied the West Bank, including east Jerusalem, in the Six-Day War of 1967.

It later annexed east Jerusalem in a move never recognised by the internatio­nal community and claims the entire city as its capital.

The Palestinia­ns see east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state.

 ?? HAZEM BADER/AFP ?? A billboard welcoming US President Donald Trump is seen in Bethlehem yesterday during his visit to the West Bank town.
HAZEM BADER/AFP A billboard welcoming US President Donald Trump is seen in Bethlehem yesterday during his visit to the West Bank town.

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