The National - News

Netanyahu brags of closer US ties

Trump’s contradict­ory stances on Israeli expansion and Jerusalem may finally be clarified during two leaders’ meeting

- Rob Crilly Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

NEW YORK // Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet Donald Trump in Washington today, providing the first test of the American president’s campaign commitment­s to closer ties, and his promise to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

After eight years of frosty relations with Barack Obama, many in Mr Netanyahu’s rightwing coalition believe they now have a friend in the White House.

The meeting could set the tone for Israel’s most important relationsh­ip. It may also clarify Mr Trump’s sometimes contradict­ory and confused approach to the Middle East, with the two leaders expected to discuss regional security and the threat from Iran.

“The alliance between Israel and America has always been extremely strong. It’s about to get even stronger,” Mr Netanyahu said as he boarded a plane to Washington. “President Trump and I see eye-to-eye on the dangers emanating from the region, but also on the opportunit­ies.” Mr Trump was outspoken in his support of Israel during his presidenti­al campaign. He promised to move the US embassy to Jerusalem and said he was opposed to any pause in West Bank settlement constructi­on.

Mr Trump has also entrusted much of his Middle East policy to his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Not only did Mr Kushner grow up in an Orthodox Jewish family, he is a family friend of the Israeli prime minister and his parents’ charity has donated thousands of dollars to a settlement in the occupied West Bank. It marks a break from Mr Obama who, like previous presidents, was committed to Palestinia­n statehood and consistent­ly opposed settlement building.

But since his inaugurati­on, Mr Trump has reversed a string of controvers­ial foreign policy stances, including reconfirmi­ng America’s One China policy and expressing support for Nato.

On Israel, he has publicly cooled on moving the embassy and on building settlement.

“I am not somebody that believes that going forward with these settlement­s is a good thing for peace,” he said last week.

Some detect the influence of Arab diplomacy. Jordan’s King Abdullah met Mr Trump last week and reportedly warned him that moving the US embassy to Jerusalem would have a detrimenta­l effect on Israel-Palestinia­n relations.

There are also other reasons for letting the Palestinia­n question lie. Israel has been quietly reaching out to Gulf states that share its fear of a resurgent Iran.

A sudden move by the US could inflame tensions in the region and risks destroying a nascent, de facto alliance between Mr Trump, Israel and Gulf states.

Mr Trump’s team is complying with Mr Netanyahu’s view about how to deal with Iran, said Adnan Khalil, chief editor of Al Hawadeth newspaper, which serves American Arabs.

“Also Gulf states – especially Saudi Arabia – have the same perspectiv­e. This is a unique coalition now,” he added. Mr Trump may be waking up to the complexiti­es of the Middle East and realising that bombastic campaign promises on moving the embassy, for example, may disrupt other goals such as curbing Iranian influence.

Others see the pragmatic hand of Mr Netanyahu, the arch survivor. Some analysts believe he is trying to dampen the hopes of fractious right-wingers among his coalition partners and within his own Likud Party.

In the past, he was able to use Mr Obama’s opposition to settlement­s to keep settler groups in line and maintain the status quo. Mr Trump’s election changed that, energising hardline ministers who want to make the West Bank part of Israel and to kill off the two-state solution. But since his inaugurati­on, the new president has begun to express a more sceptical position on settlement­s. As a White House statement put it at the start of the month: “While we don’t believe the existence of settlement­s is an impediment to peace, the constructi­on of new settlement­s or the expansion of existing settlement­s beyond their current borders may not be helpful in achieving that goal.”

Lisa Goldman, contributi­ng editor of the Israeli magazine + 972, said she believed the White House would not have softened its stance without the go-ahead from the Israeli leadership.

“Netanyahu is in a difficult position from his Right flank,” she said. “And he is very happy with the status quo.” Watching whether Mr Netanyahu feels the need to lecture his host on settlement­s – as he did Mr Obama – will provide clues to their relationsh­ip, she said.

That relationsh­ip goes back to before Mr Trump entered politics. In 2013, he made an election video for Mr Netanyahu that ended with the line: “Vote for Benjamin, terrific guy, terrific leader, great for Israel.”

And then there is Mr Kushner, whose real estate developer father, Charles, was friendly with Mr Netanyahu before he became prime minister.

During one visit to the family home in New Jersey, Mr Netanyahu even slept in the teenage Kushner’s bed. On another, he played football with boys at a school bearing the Kushner name.

Before Mr Netanyahu left for Washington, he faced calls from Naftali Bennett, his hardline education minister, to use the meeting to abandon the two-state solution. But the Israeli prime minister told his Likud cabinet ministers there would be no sudden shift.

“This requires a responsibl­e and considered policy – and thus I intend to act. I have navigated Israeli-US relations in a prudent manner and I will continue to do so now,” he said.

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