The Daily Telegraph

Trump: Israel and Arabs should unite to defeat Iran

President claims the terrorist threat presents a ‘rare opportunit­y’ to forge a peace deal in Middle East

- By Raf Sanchez in Jerusalem

DONALD TRUMP hailed a “rare opportunit­y” for peace in the Middle East during his first visit to Israel yesterday, saying the shared threat of Iran could unite the Jewish state with its Arab neighbours and propel an agreement with the Palestinia­ns.

On the third day of his trip, which included the first visit to the Western Wall by a sitting president, Mr Trump said Iran was the main source of instabilit­y in the region and urged Israel to come together with its Arab neighbours to confront the Islamic Republic.

“There is a growing realisatio­n among your Arab neighbours that they have common cause with you in the threat posed by Iran,” Mr Trump said. “What’s happened with Iran has brought many other parts of the Middle East towards Israel.”

Mr Trump also defended himself against allegation­s he revealed classified informatio­n to Russian diplomats. Mr Trump said he “never mentioned the word or the name Israel” in his conversati­on with Russia’s foreign minister and ambassador. “So you have another story wrong,” he told journalist­s.

Several reports claimed that Mr Trump shared Israeli intelligen­ce about the threat posed by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil).

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, tried to gloss over the issue by insisting that Us-israeli intelligen­ce sharing had “never been better”.

Mr Netanyahu also endorsed the idea of Arab-israeli cooperatio­n against Iran, saying it would “help reconcilia­tion between Israel and the Palestinia­ns”.

Mr Trump’s broadsides against Iran in both Israel and Saudi Arabia came

‘There is a realisatio­n among your Arab neighbours that they have common cause with you’

days after Iranian voters re-elected their relatively moderate president Hassan Rouhani and rejected a hardline candidate who favoured a more confrontat­ional approach to the West. At his first press conference since his election vic- tory, Mr Rouhani dismissed the antiirania­n tenor of the summit in Saudi Arabia as “just a show”.

The first day of Mr Trump’s visit in Israel was heavy on symbolism but offered few details on how he hopes to clinch “the ultimate deal” – an Israelipal­estinian peace agreement.

He will give a speech today where he is expected to lay out his broad vision.

Mr Trump will also travel to Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank, where he will meet Palestinia­n president Mahmoud Abbas.

Both Israelis and Palestinia­ns made goodwill gestures ahead of the president’s arrival, with Israel offering some economic benefits for the West Bank and the Palestinia­ns signalling they were open to more extensive land swaps than previously discussed.

Wearing a traditiona­l Jewish yarmulke, Mr Trump prayed briefly at the Western Wall, one of the holiest sites in Judaism. Rex Tillerson, the US secretary of state, stoked controvers­y by refusing to say whether the US considered the Wall to be in Israel. The long-standing US position has been that the status of Jerusalem is not settled until there is a peace agreement. Mr Tillerson also accidental­ly said that Tel Aviv was “home to Judaism” instead of Jerusalem. Both comments irritated the Israelis.

Mr Trump’s unscripted comments on the alleged informatio­n leak to Russia denied an allegation that was never made. Critics said the problem was not that he explicitly identified Israel, but that he might have endangered the source of the intelligen­ce and make Israel and other allies more wary of sharing secrets with the US. “The fact that he still doesn’t understand what the fuss is about is deeply disconcert­ing,” said Oren Kessler, a Washington analyst formerly based in Israel.

The president and his wife Melania landed at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion airport accompanie­d by Mr Trump’s daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner, whom the president has put in charge of Middle East peace.

They were greeted by Mr Netanyahu and his wife Sara, who told the Trumps that the two couples had something in common: they were disliked by the media but loved by their people. Mr Trump said: “We have very much in common.”

Footage of Mr and Mrs Trump arriving in Israel caused a stir after it appeared to show Melania batting away her husband’s outstretch­ed hand.

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 ??  ?? President Trump prayed at Jerusalem’s Western Wall before inserting a note between the stones, right. He was accompanie­d by his wife Melania and daughter Ivanka, left
President Trump prayed at Jerusalem’s Western Wall before inserting a note between the stones, right. He was accompanie­d by his wife Melania and daughter Ivanka, left

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