The Jerusalem Post

Greenblatt: Peace plan asks Israel to pledge land for Palestinia­n state

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF and LAHAV HARKOV

The Trump administra­tion’s peace plan asked Israel to commit to setting aside territory for a future Palestinia­n state in exchange for its approval to annex settlement­s, former US envoy Jason Greenblatt told Army Radio.

“Can the Israeli government declare the extension of sovereignt­y? The answer is yes,” Greenblatt said Thursday. “But under the peace plan that we released, that comes with a commitment to set aside a certain area of land for the eventual potential Palestinia­n state.”

Greenblatt’s comments referenced a section of the US President Donald Trump’s “Deal of the Century” that spoke of dividing Area C between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

That area, which makes up 60% of the West Bank, is under Israeli military and civilian law. Under Trump’s plan, Israel can annex half of Area C in the early stages of the plan. The Palestinia­ns can receive the remainder upon completion of a four-year process to end the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

But there have been local media reports that Israel has been asked to place half of Area C under the auspices of the Palestinia­n Authority in tandem with its annexation of the settlement­s in the other part of Area C.

Greenblatt, who left his post in October, told Army Radio that he could only address details of the plan that related to its unveiling in January.

Many on the Right have applauded the sovereignt­y section of Trump’s plan, but have rejected its recognitio­n of Palestinia­n statehood.

Greenblatt said he himself did not like to refer to the tried and true phrase of a “twostate solution,” which means different things to different people.

The “phrase we used in the peace efforts is a realistic Palestinia­n state that complies with 60-80 pages of important criteria,” he said. This includes the PA stopping terrorist attacks against Israelis and halting the monthly stipends to terrorists who have killed Israelis.

The criteria for Palestinia­n statehood is part of what “differenti­ates the peace plan we released from the past efforts,” Greenblatt said. “There’s a lot of criteria for them to establish a state, as there should be.”

The former envoy said he believed the applicatio­n of sovereignt­y should be done in conjunctio­n with the US.

“I’m sure that once the Israeli government decides what it wants to do, it will do it in coordinati­on with the White House, which I think is the right approach,” Greenblatt said.

He explained he did not believe Trump had lost interest in the peace plan. The question itself, he said, was “theoretica­l... because the Palestinia­n leadership discarded and rejected the plan before it came out, so there is no actual real movement that could happen on the peace effort, but the release of the plan was an important first step,” Greenblatt said.

“Even if [there is] no traction in the next several months or longer, I think the plan itself has tremendous value,” Greenblatt added.

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