The Jerusalem Post

Trump’s team fine tunes timetable for peace plan rollout, sources say

- • By MICHAEL WILNER Jerusalem Post Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – The Trump administra­tion plans to unveil its long-awaited peace plan in February, but its release may be delayed until March or April as it trains new staff on a team dedicated to the coming diplomatic effort, according to US officials familiar with the matter.

Publicatio­n of the plan – a project that is two years in the making, led by US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and his longtime attorney and adviser, Jason Greenblatt – has faced repeated delays.

Members of the tight-knit peace team bristled at timetables and deadlines, but now privately admit that their timing will never be perfect for the launch of a fresh peace process reliant on participat­ion of Israelis, Palestinia­ns and Arabs navigating their own complex politics.

The team has given up on the belief that the Palestinia­ns will come to the table of their own accord, without first viewing the contents of the plan first. For several months after Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital a year ago, Kushner and Greenblatt expressed hope that Palestinia­n Authority leaders might simply need time to vent their frustratio­ns, only to come back around.

That has not happened, leading the team to believe that they will need significan­t regional buy-in.

Kushner is said to be aiming for a February release, but one source briefed on the strategic plan said he expects the plan to launch no earlier than March.

In September, at the UN General Assembly in New York, Trump told reporters he wanted the peace process to start within two to four months. His aides have now dropped that language and admit that the outer limits of Trump’s timeline will not be met. A White House official cautioned

The Jerusalem Post that the team remains flexible and has no date set in stone, and that acknowledg­ing events outside of their control might continue to impact the timeline.

One such event already contribute­d to the disruption of the team’s plans: The brutal murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident, journalist and US resident, by Saudi officials at their consulate in Turkey.

Kushner is relying on Saudi crown prince Muhammed bin Salman – believed complicit in the killing – to legitimize his peace initiative, to help bring Palestinia­ns back to the table and potentiall­y splinter off a separate line of talks on normalizin­g Israeli-Saudi relations.

But no party in the region is eager for this process to start. The Palestinia­ns continue to dismiss the Trump administra­tion as an honest broker, and prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is reportedly wary of any process that will require him to give in to significan­t concession­s ahead of next year’s elections.

And a new Congress, with Democrats in control of the House of Representa­tives, presents additional challenges to the peace team. Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee have privately told Kushner they will oppose the plan if it does not explicitly support a two-state solution.

In public and in private, Kushner has responded to this question by claiming the concept of a state “means different things to different people.” Trump endorsed “two states” at the UN General Assembly in September, but did not elaborate on his administra­tion’s vision.

The strategic rollout was discussed in a meeting with Trump, Kushner, Greenblatt and David Friedman, the US ambassador to Israel, in the Oval Office last month.

“Our timing, our strategy and our messaging is and will be entirely our own,” Friedman said after the meeting, responding to reports that the meeting resulted in yet another delay.

Reports have emerged that Friedman, Greenblatt and Kushner internally disagree on timing and certain elements of the plan – a series of rumors that all three men deny.

“We intend to release the president’s vision,” Friedman continued, “when the administra­tion concludes that we have maximized its potential for acceptance, execution and implementa­tion.” •

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