National Post (National Edition)
THE U.S. IS UNFIT TO LEAD PEACE TALKS, SAYS PALESTINIAN LEADER IN MAJOR POLICY SHIFT
‘We got the slap of our times’
‘Declarations do not impress us’
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas told Arab and Islamic leaders on Wednesday that the United States is no longer fit to broker an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal and should be replaced as mediator by the United Nations, outlining a significant policy shift in response to President Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
In a dispassionate speech, Abbas said his people will no longer accept the United States as a peace broker but added that they remain committed to international resolutions that have formed the basis of the process.
Abbas was speaking at the gathering of heads of state and top officials from Islamic nations at a summit in Turkey that is expected to forge a unified Muslim world’s stance against Trump’s move.
Abbas said Trump’s decision was a “crime” that came when the Palestinians were engaged with Washington in a push to reach what he said was anticipated to be the “deal of our times.”
“Instead we got the slap of our times,” Abbas said. “The United States has chosen to lose its qualification as a mediator ... We will no longer accept that it has a role in the political process from now.”
The speech marked an abrupt change in Abbas’s approach, after years of focusing on courting U.S. goodwill because of Washington’s role as sole mediator in the IsraeliPalestinian conflict.
Immediately after Trump’s announcement last week, Abbas had said the U.S. effectively disqualified itself as a broker, but Wednesday’s speech was more sharply worded and delivered to a global audience. It was also part of a speech that called on the gathering for specific steps to counter the U.S. decision on Jerusalem.
“We call that the (peace) process in its entirety be transferred to the United Nations,” Abbas said. He also called on countries that believe in the two-state solution to recognize Palestine as a state, and urged Arab and Muslim nations to financially support east Jerusalem.
In his speech, Abbas also urged Muslim nations and countries with relations with Israel to take necessary political and economic measures against Israel “to force it to abide by international consensus” to end its occupation of Palestinian territories, including east Jerusalem.
Last week, Abbas’ aides said the Palestinian leader would not meet with Mike Pence during the U.S. vicepresident’s planned visit to Israel and the West Bank next week. Abbas had initially planned to meet with Pence in Bethlehem.
The Istanbul gathering of heads of state and top officials from the 57-member Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) was also an opportunity for the Muslim world to offer its strongest response yet to Washington’s move.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan — current president of the OIC — called on countries to urgently recognize the Palestinian state and Jerusalem as its capital.
Erdogan has been among the most vocal critics of Trump’s announcement. In remarks to the summit, he said Israel is an “occupying state” and a “terror state.”
In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to criticize Abbas’s comments, though he did not directly refer to the Palestinian leader.
Netanyahu said in a speech Wednesday that Palestinians should “work for peace and not for extremism.”
“All of these declarations do not impress us,” Netanyahu said.
He said Israel is committed to protecting the freedom of worship for all religions in Jerusalem, but reaffirmed Israel’s claims to the entire city.
Jerusalem’s status is at the core of the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict and Trump’s Dec. 6 announcement was widely perceived as siding with Israel. It also raised fears of more bloodshed as past crises over Jerusalem have triggered violent outbreaks.
King Abdullah II of Jordan told the gathering that the Trump decision was “grave,” threatening the resumption of any peace talks.
Meanwhile, the White House said Trump “remains as committed to peace as ever.” The White House will remain “hard at work putting together our plan, which will benefit the Israeli and Palestinian peoples,” said a senior official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Most countries have not recognized Israel’s 1967 annexation of east Jerusalem.