The Jerusalem Post

Consensus at White House: Gaza is critical to peace

- • By MICHAEL WILNER Jerusalem Post Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – Trump administra­tion officials worked the phones for weeks to bring Israeli and Arab diplomats around the same table at the White House, and finally succeeded in doing so for the first time on Tuesday.

Senior administra­tion officials said that several parties to the US conference, which focused on the dire and pressing humanitari­an plight facing the Gaza Strip, had expressed that “they could not be in the same room as each other.”

And yet, “we had discussion­s with them, and everybody realized the importance of being in the room,” one senior official told The Jerusalem Post after the six-hour conference, held in the gilded Indian Treaty Room of the executive office building.

The discussion brought national security officials from Israel, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Oman and Bahrain together for an exceptiona­l diplomatic moment – the possible start of a regional dialogue over Israeli-Palestinia­n peace, ahead of the publicatio­n of a peace plan by the Trump administra­tion meant to comprehens­ively end claims to the conflict.

But the US team could not vouch for whether the Israelis and any particular Arab delegation­s held talks separate from the formal session on the sidelines.

“It was a room with a big table, and everyone sat around the big table,” the official said. “The format didn’t lend itself to any direct talks between any sides.”

Trump’s team was led by Jared Kushner, the president’s sonin-law and senior adviser leading the administra­tion’s peace process, and Jason Greenblatt, the US special representa­tive for internatio­nal negotiatio­ns. Their opening remarks and presentati­on alone lasted for two hours.

“We need to fix Gaza for a variety of reasons, whether we reach a peace agreement or don’t reach a peace agreement,” the US team said. But “of course, it is necessary to achieve a peace agreement.”

A large focus of the summit was on Hamas’s control of the Strip, which the administra­tion believes is an impediment both to the delivery of critical humanitari­an assistance, but also to the success of its pending peace initiative.

The officials would not comment on Qatar’s particular role in the Gaza crisis after successive US administra­tions have blamed Doha for boosting Hamas there.

One administra­tion official said the US hopes to secure Palestinia­n Authority participat­ion in its effort to wrestle back control of Gaza from Hamas. But the PA rejected the administra­tion’s offer to join the White House conference, the US official added.

While the peace plan was not the focus of the conference, Kushner and Greenblatt see the Gaza crisis and the prospects for their plans success as inextricab­ly linked. And to that end, the peace team is optimistic that it was able to bring together Israel and Arab powers – if not the Palestinia­ns themselves.

“Certainly it is our hope that it is just the beginning,” one official said. “Its too soon to tell.”

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