The Jerusalem Post

Arab leaders at summit to seek common ground on Palestinia­n state

- • By SULEIMAN AL-KHALIDI and ALI SAWAFTA

DEAD SEA, Jordan (Reuters) – Divided Arab leaders arriving in Jordan for a summit on Wednesday are seeking common ground to reaffirm their commitment to a Palestinia­n state, a longstandi­ng goal that US President Donald Trump last month put into doubt.

The Dead Sea meeting is expected to have a bigger turnout than recent Arab summits, Jordanian officials say, and security forces cast a high profile in the capital Amman with armored vehicles standing at traffic junctions as leaders flew in.

While they are highly unlikely to bridge rifts over the regional role of Iran or intractabl­e wars in Syria and Yemen, Arab leaders remain united in supporting a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

“We are concerned that there should be an Arab consensus on the Palestinia­n file, so that this reflects clearly in the discussion­s of Arab states and their leaders with the new American administra­tion,” Palestinia­n Authority Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki told Reuters.

Before taking office in January, Trump promised to move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem – something adamantly opposed by Arabs as tantamount, in their view, to recognizin­g Israeli sovereignt­y over Jerusalem.

The Palestinia­ns want east Jerusalem – which Israel captured in a 1967 war and later annexed in a move not recognized internatio­nally – as the capital of a future state encompassi­ng the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

Israeli-Palestinia­n peace talks have been frozen since 2014.

Trump, during a White House news conference with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last month, indicated he was open to a one-state solution to the conflict.

That would be deeply problemati­c for both sides, as it would mean either two systems for two peoples – something Palestinia­ns would see as apartheid – or equal rights for all, which would compromise Israel’s Jewish character.

The Arab monarchs and presidents attending Wednesday’s summit will meet at the Dead Sea, only a few kilometers from the West Bank and with Israeli settlement­s visible to the naked eye.

The United States is sending a representa­tive to the summit, Maliki said. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Jordan’s King Abdullah are both scheduled to meet with Trump soon.

A draft resolution on Jerusalem seen by Reuters will require all Arab states to respond to any move by any country to move its embassy there, without specifying the United States.

“The Palestinia­n issue is the central issue. It is the root cause of conflict in the region and its resolution is the key to peace and stability. We hope we will be able to again relaunch efforts that would get serious negotiatio­ns restarted again,” Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said.

The biggest disagreeme­nt among Arab countries is over the regional role of Iran, an ally of Syria and Iraq and the Shi’ite Hezbollah movement that dominates Lebanon, but regarded by Saudi Arabia and some other Sunni states as a bitter adversary.

Iran and Saudi Arabia support opposing sides in the civil wars in Syria and Yemen, which have caused humanitari­an catastroph­es, and in political and factional disputes simmering for years in Bahrain and Lebanon.

The Middle East’s political feuds have stoked sectarian tensions between Islam’s main Sunni and Shi’ite branches in recent years, contributi­ng to increased violence.

“We meet in a difficult Arab era dominated by crisis and conflicts that deprive our region of the security and stability they need to attain our people’s rights,” Safadi said in a meeting with fellow foreign ministers before the summit.

A Jordanian official told Reuters that the final statement from the summit is expected to include a condemnati­on of Iran for what it called meddling in internal Arab affairs, and a call for it to refrain from using force or threats. Iran denies any such interferen­ce.

A summit meeting of the Organizati­on for Islamic Cooperatio­n included a similar line in its final statement last year.

Friction also smolders between Saudi Arabia, the richest Arab state, and Egypt, the most populous one – close allies for decades before the 2011 Arab Spring uprisings – over approaches to Syria’s war and the demarcatio­n of their marine border.

The kingdom’s oil giant Saudi Aramco resumed petroleum shipments to Egypt earlier this month, suggesting relations may be improving, and Egypt’s Sisi is hoping for a bilateral meeting with King Salman in Amman this week.

“There could actually be a product of the Arab summit – a unified attitude towards Washington’s policy in Palestine. They might disagree on all other issues, but I think this is the unifying one,” said Mustafa Alani, an Iraqi security expert with close ties to the Saudi Interior Ministry.

 ?? (Muhammad Hamed/Reuters) ?? LEBANON’S PRESIDENT Michel Aoun is welcomed by Jordan’s King Abdullah II during a reception ceremony at the Queen Alia Internatio­nal Airport in Amman yesterday.
(Muhammad Hamed/Reuters) LEBANON’S PRESIDENT Michel Aoun is welcomed by Jordan’s King Abdullah II during a reception ceremony at the Queen Alia Internatio­nal Airport in Amman yesterday.

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