Los Angeles Times

U.S. accelerate­s plans for embassy in Jerusalem

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Noga Tarnopolsk­y

WASHINGTON — Accelerati­ng controvers­ial plans, the Trump administra­tion will open a small U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem in May to coincide with the 70th anniversar­y of Israel’s declaratio­n of independen­ce, a State Department official said Friday.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson approved preliminar­y security plans for a limited contingent, including the ambassador, David Friedman, and a skeleton staff, to move into a section of the American Consulate in the Arnona neighborho­od of Jerusalem, said Steven Goldstein, the undersecre­tary for public diplomacy and public affairs.

“The goal is to open a small footprint in May, and, over time, open a more full embassy by the end of 2019,” Goldstein said in an interview.

The May 14 date — the date Israel originally declared independen­ce — significan­tly accelerate­s the schedule for transferri­ng the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv, where it always existed along with the rest of the world’s diplomatic missions, to the disputed holy city of Jerusalem. (According to the Hebrew calendar, Independen­ce Day this year will be celebrated April 18.)

President Trump in December announced he was recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and ordering the embassy transfer, reversing decades of U.S. and internatio­nal policy and enraging the Arab world and many allies.

While Israel claims Jerusalem as its “eternal and undivided” capital, Palestinia­ns also claim the eastern part of the city as their capital in a future independen­t state.

The status of Jerusalem was to be decided in final peace talks. The Palestinia­ns now contend that the U.S., once the broker of such talks, has disqualifi­ed itself as a mediator by taking Israel’s side.

The move has been celebrated in Israel, which has long had its ministries, parliament and government offices in Jerusalem. But it generated a wave of furious, weekly protests in Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Vice President Mike Pence, visiting Jerusalem last month, gave the first sign that the embassy transfer was being accelerate­d, when he announced to the Israeli Knesset, or parliament, that the move would take place by the end of 2019.

U.S. officials say the 2019 deadline would see a substantia­l annex of the consulate in Jerusalem becoming the embassy. A new building to house a full embassy, however, will still take several years to establish, the officials said.

Israel Katz, the Israeli minister of intelligen­ce, congratula­ted the Trump administra­tion in a tweet Friday. “There is no greater gift than that!” he said. “The most just and correct move.”

Majdi Khaldi, diplomatic advisor to Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, decried the “unfortunat­e announceme­nt” that he described as “illegal, irresponsi­ble and unacceptab­le to Palestinia­ns.”

Trump’s move, Khaldi said in an interview, “gave the Israelis a pretext to say that Jerusalem is unified under Israeli rule,” contravene­s internatio­nal law and will impede peace efforts.

“It cancels any peace offer,” Khaldi said.

Trump, speaking at the White House on Friday alongside visiting Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, reiterated a claim he has made that his administra­tion is making “great progress” on promoting peace in the Middle East. Several former ambassador­s to Israel say, in fact, peace has never been further away.

Jerusalem, a 6,000-yearold city, was divided for 19 years, from the date of Israel’s 1948 founding until the war of 1967, when Israel seized the eastern half of the city from Jordan.

The embassy move is scheduled to take place on the date marking Israel’s Declaratio­n of Independen­ce in 1948, which Palestinia­ns call Naqba Day, or the day of the catastroph­e.

State Department lawyers, meanwhile, were examining whether it is legal to accept private donations to fund a diplomatic mission, following a proposal by Las Vegas casino magnate and pro-Israel hawk Sheldon Adelson to pay for the new embassy.

Adelson is a major contributo­r to the Republican Party, a loyal supporter of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and owner of a popular tabloid in Israel.

However, Goldstein said there were “no formal talks” between the State Department and any private citizen for financing the embassy, and no formal requests made for such an arrangemen­t.

tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com Times staff writer Wilkinson reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Tarnopolsk­y from Jerusalem.

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