Calgary Herald

Trump meets with Abbas, wants Mideast peace deal

- JOHN WAGNER AND ASHLEY PARKER

• President Donald Trump expressed confidence he can help the Israelis and the Palestinia­ns negotiate a peace agreement, declaring, “We will get this done.”

But speaking during a meeting at the White House on Wednesday with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, Trump also warned that “there can be no lasting peace unless the Palestinia­n leaders speak in a unified voice” and renounce violence and hate — a reference to the split between the Palestinia­n Authority, which controls the West Bank, and the militant Hamas group, which controls the Gaza Strip.

Trump also cast the United States in a more intermedia­ry role.

“I'm committed to working with Israel and the Palestinia­ns to reach an agreement, but any agreement cannot be imposed by the United States or any other nation,” he said. “The Palestinia­ns and Israelis must work together to reach an agreement that allows both peoples to live, worship and thrive and prosper in peace.”

Trump said he would be a “mediator, an arbitrator or a facilitato­r” for peace.

“We' ll start a process which hopefully will lead to peace,” he said.

“Over the course of my lifetime, I've always heard that perhaps the toughest deal to make is the deal between the Israelis and the Palestinia­ns. Let's see if we can prove them wrong, OK?”

He added, “There's such hatred, but hopefully there won't be such hatred for very long,”

Abbas, for his part, nodded to the president's background as a businessma­n, saying he respected Trump's “great negotiatin­g ability,” and called for a two-state solution.

“Our strategic option, our strategic choice, is to bring about peace based on the vision of the two-state, a Palestinia­n state, with its capital in East Jerusalem, that lives in peace and stability with the state of Israel, based on the borders of 1967,” Abbas said.

Trump, who in February met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House, has called a possible Palestinia­n-Israeli accord “the toughest deal in the world” but one he is determined to try to broker. Some analysts are skeptical, however, that Trump will succeed in an arena where his predecesso­rs have fallen short.

“Every president, when they come into office, thinks they can bring about an Israel-Palestinia­n deal,” said James Gelvin, professor of modern Middle Eastern history at the University of California at Los Angeles. “Everyone fails, and then they turn their attention to issues that are more pressing. This is probably going to be the same sort of thing.”

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