Los Angeles Times

Palestinia­ns snub U.S.-hosted Mideast peace forum

- By Tracy Wilkinson

WASHINGTON — The United States on Wednesday opened a highly promoted internatio­nal conference on peace in the Middle East, but some central players, the Palestinia­ns, were a no-show.

Representa­tives of about 60 countries, including several Arab states, planned to attend, but a number of European nations sent low-level delegation­s to protest U.S. policy. The conference in Warsaw was to focus not only on dim prospects for Israeli-Palestinia­n peace but also on Iran, which the Trump administra­tion regards as the primary force for destabiliz­ation in the Middle East.

President Trump and his advisors are seen in many parts of the world as being excessivel­y pro-Israel and isolationi­st, underminin­g Washington’s credibilit­y as a broker of Middle East peace.

Declaring that “Palestine won’t play Trump’s game, in Warsaw or anywhere,” Palestinia­n Authority official Nabil Shaath said negotiatio­ns were impossible given the administra­tion’s refusal to embrace the principle of Palestinia­n nationhood and its decision to move the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, where Israel and the Palestinia­ns have conflictin­g claims.

“The Trump Team aims to use this conference as an event to push for their vision for Israel and Palestine, one that, based on the steps they have taken, is certainly not about peacemakin­g,” Shaath wrote in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz on Wednesday.

Palestinia­n leaders have refused to meet with American negotiator­s since the embassy move in May.

In Warsaw, the U.S. side was well represente­d, ref lecting the administra­tion’s stake in the event. Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo led a delegation that also included Trump’s top advisors on Middle East peace: his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and special envoy Jason Greenblatt.

Also attending was Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who stunned attendees by announcing in a tweet that he was sitting down with leaders of Arab states to discuss their “common interest” in combating Iran. Few Arab leaders can acknowledg­e sitting down with an Israeli official to discuss anything, much less war on a regional power. Netanyahu’s tweet used the phrase “war” with Iran — bellicose language even by his standards — and his office later changed it to “combating.”

Netanyahu is hoping conference­s like this one will help to burnish his diplomatic credential­s ahead of a tough April 9 election battle.

The presence of Kushner and Greenblatt, who are charged with drafting what Trump once said would become the “deal of the century,” ending the the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict, raised speculatio­n that the team might be prepared to release some details. They were scheduled to brief delegates behind closed doors Thursday. The draft has been kept under wraps, its release repeatedly delayed, though some broad outlines are known.

Kushner failed to win support from Saudi Arabia last year when he began shopping the plan around the Persian Gulf region. The Trump strategy relies on major Arab states, especially in the gulf, relaxing their historical hostility toward Israel and putting pressure on the Palestinia­ns to compromise.

But as Kushner learned, even the friendly Saudis will go only so far; a failure to award the Palestinia­ns with any piece of Jerusalem, as the first draft reportedly did, drew a veto from Saudi King Salman. Since then, Kushner and Greenblatt have been adjusting the plan.

Yousef Munayyer, a political analyst in Washington who heads the U.S. Campaign for Palestinia­n Rights, said Palestinia­n skepticism about the Warsaw conference, which is co-hosted by Poland, ran deep.

The conference, he said, “is going to be a show, to send a message to the Palestinia­ns that you have to get with the program or you’re going to miss out.”

In addition to the Palestinia­ns, Russia and China were not attending the Warsaw conference. Nor, unsurprisi­ngly, was Iran.

Initially, the Trump administra­tion portrayed the conference as a gathering expressly to coordinate against the Islamic Republic in Tehran. Trump’s advisors sought to present a show of global solidarity even as most countries have disagreed with U.S. policies toward Iran.

Several European leaders said they would not attend a solely anti-Iran meeting. Washington changed the name to the Ministeria­l to Promote a Future of Peace and Security in the Middle East, adding to the agenda conflicts from Yemen to Syria.

Still, for the administra­tion, Iran is key. Since pulling out of the multinatio­nal Iran nuclear deal last year, the Trump administra­tion has sought to build a coalition to challenge Tehran. Opposing Shiite-dominated Iran is also a goal that unites Israel with the Sunni-led gulf nations.

Greenblatt, who has spent much of the last few days in a Twitter feud with various Palestinia­n officials, linked the two geopolitic­al issues.

“Iran is the primary threat to the future of regional peace/security,” he tweeted. “That’s what Palestinia­n leaders don’t grasp; as a consequenc­e of being detached from new realities, we see Palestinia­ns increasing­ly left behind/more isolated than ever.”

Brian Hook, the State Department’s special envoy on Iran, insisted that there was common ground among U.S. allies for holding Iran accountabl­e and containing its regional activities, such as financing of militant groups in Syria and Yemen and exporting of missiles and other weaponry.

“We agreed to disagree with the Europeans on the nuclear deal,” Hook said, but agree on other “malign behavior” by Iran.

In fact, three of the most important European powers — Germany, France and Britain — recently establishe­d a mechanism that will help Iran do business with European companies and skirt U.S. sanctions.

“When you are investing in Iran’s economy, you can never be sure whether you are facilitati­ng commerce or terrorism,” Hook, speaking from Warsaw, told NPR.

Special correspond­ent Noga Tarnopolsk­y in Jerusalem contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Radek Pietruszka EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? MIKE PENCE, from left, joins Poland’s Andrzej Duda and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu in Warsaw.
Radek Pietruszka EPA/Shuttersto­ck MIKE PENCE, from left, joins Poland’s Andrzej Duda and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu in Warsaw.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States