Los Angeles Times

Palestinia­ns find little reassuranc­e

Trump’s remarks with Israeli leader leave future of two-state solution in doubt.

- By Joshua Mitnick and Laura King Special correspond­ent Mitnick reported from Ramallah and Times staff writer King from Washington. laura.king@latimes.com

RAMALLAH, West Bank — Four years ago, the West Bank city of Ramallah rejoiced when the United Nations voted to recognize a Palestinia­n state — a symbolic move, but seen at the time by many as a hopeful step on the road to self-determinat­ion.

Now few in the city believe that the new U.S. administra­tion will help advance the cause of Palestinia­n statehood, and that doubt is echoed across much of the Arab world.

“The people are very confused,” said Somida Abbas, a 58-year-old Palestinia­n insurance executive sitting in a cafe on Ramallah’s main square. “I’m sure that I will not ever live to see a Palestinia­n state now.”

There was little surprise over the deliberate show of bonhomie Wednesday at a joint White House appearance by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Trump, who throughout his campaign had signaled willingnes­s to break with decades of U.S. policy.

But many in the Palestinia­n territorie­s, and across the region, were shaken by the president’s almost casual dismissal of the longstandi­ng U.S. commitment to the eventual creation of a Palestinia­n state, a diplomatic bedrock known as the two-state solution.

“I’m looking at two-state and one-state, and I like the one that both parties like,” Trump told reporters at a news conference by the two leaders. “I can live with either one.”

A single state encompassi­ng Israelis and Palestinia­ns has long been viewed as an unsatisfac­tory solution to the Mideast conundrum. By absorbing the West Bank and a Palestinia­n population roughly equal to its own, Israel would be confronted with the choice of either sacrificin­g its Jewish character or — if it relegated Palestinia­ns to second-class stature without full citizenshi­p rights — its democracy.

Some longtime observers of the region said Trump’s stance lacked the gravitas of past policymaki­ng efforts.

“It’s hard to even have a serious conversati­on based on ‘I’m fine with whatever you guys agree to,’ ” said Mouin Rabbani, a senior fellow at the Washington­based Institute for Palestine Studies.

Speaking by phone from Amman, Jordan, Rabbani said that when the president makes such a seemingly offthe-cuff remark, “you take it seriously at your peril, and you ignore it at your peril.”

Even with no peace talks in sight, the prospect of a U.S. retreat on commitment to Palestinia­n statehood threatens to undermine the stability of the already struggling Palestinia­n Authority, the Palestinia­n self-governing body set up after the 1993 Oslo accords.

The new CIA director, Mike Pompeo, was in Ramallah the same day as the Trump-Netanyahu meeting and reportedly got an earful from Palestinia­n officials about the danger of extremists being emboldened by the U.S. pullback from a commitment to Palestinia­n statehood.

“The lack of attention to the Palestinia­n side … should alarm the Palestinia­n Authority,” Nabil Amr, a former Palestinia­n government minister, told Palestinia­n radio Thursday. “It is obvious that there will be no pressure exerted on Netanyahu.”

Some regional analysts poured cold water on the notion that warming ties with some Sunni Arab states — due to a common threat posed by jihadist groups and the ambitions of Shiite Muslim Iran — could lead to any meaningful Arab engagement in a peace bid.

Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law touted by the president as a potential Mideast deal maker, has been making Arab-world contacts thought to be aimed at laying the groundwork for drawing regional powers such as Saudi Arabia into Israeli-Palestinia­n peacemakin­g. That idea dates to at least the early 1990s but has never moved forward.

At the White House news conference, Netanyahu made a point of referring to a changing relationsh­ip with Arab states other than Jordan and Egypt, with which Israel has peace treaties.

“We can seize an historic opportunit­y because for the first time in my lifetime and for the first time in the life of my country, Arab countries in the region do not see Israel as an enemy, but increasing­ly as an ally,” the Israeli leader said.

But conservati­ve Persian Gulf monarchies, mindful of domestic constituen­cies, are seen as highly unlikely to step up without significan­t Israeli concession­s, which do not appear on the horizon as long as Netanyahu’s right-wing government is in power.

None of those states has formal diplomatic ties with Israel and would almost certainly seek to keep any dealings “covert and compartmen­talized,” Rabbani said. Few gulf government­s, he said, would want to stake their prestige on a peace process that was not aimed at culminatin­g in Palestinia­n statehood.

“There is a strong Israeli interest in bringing countries like Saudi Arabia — plus Egypt and Jordan — into the fold,” said Yossi Mekelberg, an associate fellow at the British think tank Chatham House.

“If you want to go for a big move and reach the region involved, at the end of the day it is the Israelis who need to deliver the minimum requiremen­ts.”

Jerusalem Post columnist Gershon Baskin said on Twitter that if there were a U.S. push to seek an Arabbroker­ed plan, the Trump administra­tion would realize “after five minutes of talks with Arab states that there is no regional peace without two states” — Israel and Palestine.

Saudi Arabia, for its part, made no public move to leap into the diplomatic breach. Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Jubeir, attending the Group of 20 meeting in Bonn a day after the Trump-Netanyahu meeting, said little about the U.S. stance on Palestinia­n statehood other than that the kingdom looked forward to working with the new administra­tion.

Many Arab government­s, even Western-friendly ones, have long been cynical about successive U.S. administra­tions’ attempts to broker a peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns, believing that such efforts were doomed by a failure to press Israel to take steps like halting the building of settlement­s in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

In his news conference with Netanyahu, Trump raised the subject, but only gingerly, telling the Israeli leader, “I’d like to see you hold back on settlement­s for a little bit. We’ll work something out.”

Palestinia­n officials said the mild admonition on settlement building, coupled with the lack of commitment to a two-state goal, left them with little hope of a breakthrou­gh.

Hanan Ashrawi, a senior official in the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on, evoked a phrase used by Trump advisor Kellyanne Conway, who in January referred to “alternativ­e facts” during an interview.

“I don’t know if President Trump can afford to drop the two-state solution and claim to want peace,” she said. “He’s dealing with alternativ­e realities.”

In Ramallah, cafe waiter Mohammed Alawi had little to offer but a sarcastic smile when asked about the White House parley.

“I didn’t expect anything from them,” he said.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? AT A news conference Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Trump said: “I’m looking at two-state and one-state, and I like the one that both parties like. I can live with either one.”
Evan Vucci Associated Press AT A news conference Wednesday with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Trump said: “I’m looking at two-state and one-state, and I like the one that both parties like. I can live with either one.”

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