Chattanooga Times Free Press

After embassy move, Trump weighs consulate changes

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is considerin­g giving U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman more authority over the U.S. outpost that handles Palestinia­n affairs, five U.S. officials said, a shift that could further dampen Palestinia­n hopes for an independen­t state.

Any move to downgrade the autonomy of the U.S. Consulate General in Jerusalem — responsibl­e for relations with the Palestinia­ns — could have potent symbolic resonance, suggesting American recognitio­n of Israeli control over east Jerusalem and the West Bank. And while the change might be technical and bureaucrat­ic, it could have potentiall­y significan­t policy implicatio­ns.

As president, Trump has departed from traditiona­l U.S. insistence on a “two-state solution” for the Mideast conflict by leaving open the possibilit­y of just one state. As his administra­tion prepares to unveil a long-awaited peace plan, the Palestinia­ns have all but cut off contact, enraged by Trump’s decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem.

The deliberati­ons come as Friedman, who has pushed for changes to the consulate since he arrived in Israel last year, faces growing indignatio­n in the U.S. over partisan comments and other actions in which he publicly has sided with Israel over its critics. On Thursday, a top Democratic lawmaker even suggested Friedman should be recalled after he waded into domestic U.S. politics on Israel’s behalf, telling an Israeli newspaper that Democrats have failed to support Israel as much as Republican­s.

For decades, the Jerusalem consulate has operated differentl­y than almost every other consulate around the world. Rather than reporting to the U.S. Embassy in Israel, it has reported directly to the State Department in Washington, giving the Palestinia­ns an unfiltered channel to engage with the U.S. government.

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