The Jerusalem Post

Top Trump official to ‘Post’: No plan to hold PM-Abbas summit during upcoming trip

Administra­tion weighs extent to which US president should publicly comment on Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict

- • By MICHAEL WILNER Jerusalem Post correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – US President Donald Trump does not plan on hosting a trilateral summit with Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority during his trip to Jerusalem next week, senior Trump administra­tion officials told The Jerusalem Post on Saturday.

Trump will meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem and, barring security complicati­ons, will also meet with Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in Bethlehem during his first internatio­nal trip as president.

But local reports suggesting Trump will host a summit with Abbas and Netanyahu are incorrect. The Trump administra­tion is not planning such a meeting, the Post has learned, and those involved in his Middle East portfolio believe that direct negotiatio­ns at this stage may be premature.

Israelis and Palestinia­ns hold out great expectatio­ns for Trump’s arrival, hopeful the president will articulate a path forward in their stalled peace process. But his aides are offering them caution: “We still consider this in very early stages,” one official said.

A trilateral meeting is remotely possible given the president’s penchant for acting “on the fly,” the aide acknowledg­ed. But several officials intimately involved in planning the trip would be surprised if such a summit took place.

“Let’s not get carried away,” a second senior administra­tion official said, in response to reports that such a meeting has already been planned. “People are taking Abbas’s comments about [being] willing to meet too far.”

Palestinia­n officials first proposed a meeting between Trump and Abbas in Bethlehem to the White House several months ago, highlighti­ng the city’s significan­ce as the identified birthplace of Jesus. Trump’s whole trip is religiousl­y themed, centering on stops in the spiritual capitals of Riyadh, Jerusalem and Rome.

While the administra­tion is unlikely to host negotiatio­ns during this particular visit, Trump will neverthele­ss make several personal appeals for the resumption of direct talks. He will try to strike an optimistic tone, questionin­g old assumption­s that peace in this troubled region is elusive, if not impossible to achieve.

“He likes to make good deals, for his own country as well as for its friends and allies,” one senior aide said. “He would never push for a deal that would not further Israel’s security. And we just hope the Israelis know that.”

Officials expressed concern that anticipati­on surroundin­g the visit has been warped by local press reports, and are encouragin­g Israeli and Palestinia­n officials to “slow down” as they preview Trump’s plans to the media. The administra­tion is also weighing to what extent Trump should publicly comment on the conflict at

all: A speech is not guaranteed, although at minimum the White House will offer descriptio­ns of his meetings with Netanyahu and Abbas.

PA leaders worry that Trump will call for an end to its “martyr” compensati­on scheme, which provides the families of convicted murderers and terrorists in Israel with monthly stipends. Israel considers the program immoral and inflammato­ry while the Palestinia­ns argue that several of those whose families are receiving stipends have been imprisoned on political charges.

Trump raised the matter with Abbas in their May 3 meeting at the White House, and plans to do so again in Bethlehem. One official described the compensati­on scheme as a “major impediment” to peace and a matter of grave concern to the entire Trump administra­tion.

Republican­s on Capitol Hill are pushing a bill, titled the Taylor Force Act, that would cut off funding to the PA should it fail to shut down the program. The White House has not endorsed the legislatio­n, and over the weekend officials declined to comment on the congressio­nal effort. The president’s goal, they said, is to build private trust between his administra­tion and the PA – not to threaten them out of the gate with an aid severance.

On Friday, the president’s national security adviser, H. R. McMaster, said that Trump “will express his desire for dignity and self-determinat­ion for the Palestinia­ns,” as well as his “unshakable” commitment to the Jewish state. Trump is not expected to endorse a two-state solution during his visit, and will instead stick to language he used in his original meeting with Netanyahu at the White House in February.

“I am looking at two-state and onestate, and I like the one that both parties like,” the president said at the time. “I can live with either one.”

Trump departs Washington for his first stop on the trip, Saudi Arabia, on May 19.

“The president believes peace is possible – he thinks that he’s bringing a different approach than other administra­tions have tried,” one senior official said. “He thinks that the common threat from Iran may have changed the dynamic in the Arab world. There’s a lot of reason to think the environmen­t has changed.”

“Shame on us if we don’t try,” the official added.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? DONALD TRUMP
(Reuters) DONALD TRUMP

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