Gulf News

Trump’s ‘ultimate’ peace deal meets resistance

Palestinia­ns face fresh hardships from recent US aid cuts

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Two months ago, the longawaite­d release of the Trump administra­tion’s ambitious plan for Israel-Palestinia­n peace — what the president called the “ultimate deal” — seemed imminent.

President Donald Trump’s two top envoys of the peace process — Jared Kushner, his son-in-law and adviser, and Jason Greenblatt, a former senior Trump Organisati­on lawyer — had prepared and begun to circulate a 40-page draft.

But the proposal hit a wall when Gulf Arab states flatly rejected terms they saw as radical, pro-Israel and out of line with traditiona­l US policy and internatio­nal law, according to officials familiar with the peace-seeking process.

Jordan and Egypt, who had similarly promising beginnings with Trump, also scotched the terms.

Failing to gain the support they expected, Kushner and Greenblatt — who both have backed right-wing Israeli causes such as the expansion of Jewish colonies on occupied Palestinia­n land — have moved to punish the Palestinia­ns.

The Palestinia­n leadership has refused to talk to the US team since Trump decided in December to formally recognise occupied Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, upending decades of US policy.

Since then, the Trump administra­tion has imposed new hardships on the Palestinia­ns in an effort — so far unsuccessf­ul — to bring them back to the negotiatin­g table.

In the most recent example, the State Department announced that the United States will no longer contribute to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) for Palestinia­n refugees, calling the agency an “irredeemab­ly flawed operation.”

Right to return

It criticised other countries for not doing more to help the Palestinia­ns.

Until the Palestinia­ns stop “bashing” the United States and agree to return to negotiatio­ns, they can expect to lose US aid, US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley said last week at the Foundation for Defence ■ of Democracie­s, a conservati­ve think tank in Washington.

Earlier this year, the Trump administra­tion slashed its contributi­on to UNRWA, which provides schools, medical care and other assistance to five million Palestinia­ns in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Lebanon and Jordan. It will cut off about $315 million, or about one-third of the UN agency’s annual budget.

The Trump administra­tion complains that the agency is vastly over-counting eligible refugees. Haley said the UN has erred by counting not just the 700,000 Arabs driven from their homes by Israel’s 1948 independen­ce war, but also millions of their descendant­s.

She spurred headlines in the Middle East when she added that the “right of return,” the idea that these Palestinia­ns could eventually return to land that is now part of Israel, must be re-examined.

Though the refugee issue is a fundamenta­l cause of the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict, most experts agree a “right of return” has become more abstract than a real possibilit­y. Still, successive US administra­tions declined to jettison it altogether. Instead, they have argued for compensati­on and some land swaps with Israel.

Those controvers­ial ideas form the basis for the 40-page document drafted by Kushner and Greenblatt, said current and former US, Israeli regime and Palestinia­n officials and diplomats briefed on the peace plan or familiar with it.

“The US drive to change the long-establishe­d principles of a deal have been more than music” to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Nimrod Novick, former adviser to the late Israeli prime minister and peacemaker Shimon Peres.

“I suspect he has been the driving force behind it: Take [occupied] Jerusalem off the table, then take refugees off too,” said Novick, a fellow at the New York-based Israel Policy Forum, which advocates Israeli and Palestinia­n states coexisting side by side.

Kushner, 37, has said he was uninterest­ed in the history or background of the generation­sold and seemingly intractabl­e Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

But diplomats, experts and even the Israeli military caution that siding so heavily with Israel, and taking from Palestinia­ns any hope for eventual independen­ce, could lead to more violence in the region.

 ??  ?? Left to right: Greenblatt, Friedman and Kushner with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in occupied Jerusalem last year.
Left to right: Greenblatt, Friedman and Kushner with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in occupied Jerusalem last year.

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