Los Angeles Times

Trump’s plan for Mideast gives Israel far more

Snippets show Israel would gain far more than the Palestinia­ns. Trump says they will come around.

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Noga Tarnopolsk­y Times staff writer Wilkinson reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Tarnopolsk­y from Jerusalem.

The long-stalled proposal is seen as likely to fail given the lack of Palestinia­n involvemen­t. The U.S. president plans to unveil the full plan on Tuesday.

WASHINGTON — President Trump on Monday hosted Israel’s two top political figures at the White House, sharing details of his long-stalled U.S. proposal to balance Palestinia­ns’ statehood claims with Israel’s security concerns — a plan that is likely to fail given the lack of Palestinia­n involvemen­t.

With Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at his side in the Oval Office, Trump said he would unveil the full plan on Tuesday and sought to downplay Palestinia­n objections.

“They probably won’t want it initially. I think in the end, they will,” Trump said. “It’s very good for them. In fact, it’s overly good to them.”

In Ramallah, the seat of the Palestinia­n Authority in the West Bank, President Mahmoud Abbas seemed to close that door.

“Trump won’t threaten me,” Abbas, 84, said at a meeting of the central committee of Fatah, the Palestinia­ns’ ruling party. “He is an awful man, who wants to impose a plan we do not want. In whatever time I still have left, I will not become a traitor.”

Although the plan remains under wraps, some details have emerged. It is widely seen as favoring Israeli demands, including security control of the vast Jordan River Valley, recognitio­n of most if not all Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank and virtually no meaningful Palestinia­n control of the disputed holy city of Jerusalem.

Trump and Netanyahu, two politician­s besieged on their domestic fronts, heaped praise on each other in an appeal to both of their voting bases. Netanyahu told Trump he was the “greatest friend” Israel has ever had in the White House and he looked forward to “making history” with his friend and ally.

Trump and Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo met separately with Netanyahu’s chief opposition rival, Benny Gantz, who had the delicate task of appearing gracious while not playing into the political calculatio­ns of Netanyahu.

Veteran U.S. diplomats involved in the Middle East also excoriated the administra­tion for proceeding without Palestinia­n support or involvemen­t, predicting that Trump would merely dust off previously failed ideas as a political stunt.

“Releasing a plan (untethered from anything other than politics) six weeks before Israel’s 3rd election within a year and without regard to Palestinia­ns takes diplomatic malpractic­e to new levels,” tweeted Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East peace negotiator and diplomat for Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

Martin Indyk, another former negotiator and former assistant secretary of State, called the unveiling of the plan a “farce.”

Both Trump, who is facing an impeachmen­t trial in the Senate, and Netanyahu, indicted in Israel on corruption charges, could use the political respite offered by the photo ops that Washington will provide Tuesday with the formal announceme­nt of the plan.

Netanyahu is fighting for his political life and this week faces a hearing on whether the Israel parliament, or Knesset, will grant him immunity from prosecutio­n. The Knesset was scheduled to vote on the issue Tuesday, and it is not expected to grant immunity.

Trump last week surprised everyone, including the Israelis, by announcing he would finally reveal elements of his plan to resolve decades of conflict between Israel and the Palestinia­ns. He has called this “the ultimate deal,” and assigned his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to head the negotiatio­ns.

But those negotiatio­ns were troubled from the start, with Kushner, also a senior advisor, repeatedly sent back to the drawing board and unable to muster the support from gulf Arab states that he sought. Most important, Palestinia­ns were not included in the talks, dooming any agreement to failure.

Palestinia­n leaders boycotted meetings with Trump’s representa­tives after a series of administra­tion steps they saw as overtly pro-Israel. These included Trump’s decision in 2017 to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and move the U.S. Embassy there from Tel Aviv. Under decades of internatio­nal consensus, the status of the contested holy city, part of which Palestinia­ns seek as the capital of an eventual independen­t state, was to be determined as part of an overall peace agreement.

Trump went on to recognize Israeli sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights, a fertile plateau seized from Syria in the 1967 war, and to legitimize Israeli settlement­s in occupied West Bank lands claimed by the Palestinia­ns, which most of the internatio­nal community regard as illegal. Both steps reversed decades of U.S. policy and called into question the “two-state solution” for the region — an independen­t Palestinia­n nation living peacefully alongside Israel — that has been the pillar of Middle East peacemakin­g for years.

Several of Trump’s proIsrael actions came amid Netanyahu’s hard-fought — and thus far unsuccessf­ul — reelection campaign, and have been widely seen in Israel as an attempt to give the longest-serving Israeli prime minister a boost. Netanyahu and his right-wing Likud Party have faced Gantz, a former army commander and head of a new centrist political party, in two inconclusi­ve elections last year, forcing yet a third round of voting in March.

Netanyahu hopes the latest U.S. proposal will shore up his support among Israel’s far right.

In addition to Kushner, the team that Trump assembled included other proIsrael figures: his former real estate lawyer Jason Greenblatt and his ambassador to Israel and former bankruptcy lawyer David Friedman. All three had long ties to the Israeli settlement community, whose vast expansion in recent years Palestinia­ns say threatens the formation of any sort of integral Palestinia­n state.

Some in the administra­tion say the forthcomin­g plan is more of a “vision” than an agreement. Kushner has said its core is to offer economic opportunit­y to the Palestinia­ns instead of the fulfillmen­t of political aspiration­s — an idea that has failed in the past.

“It’s a very big plan,” Trump said Monday, adding it would be unveiled at 9 a.m. Tuesday. “It will be a suggestion between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.”

Trump’s negotiator­s say they are attempting to be more pragmatic than previous administra­tions. Trump said early in his administra­tion it would be one of his crowning achievemen­ts to forge a peace agreement where other government­s have failed.

Palestinia­ns, however, have reacted angrily, saying they will not be “bought off.”

“Trump’s plan is the plot of the century to liquidate the Palestinia­n cause,” Palestinia­n Foreign Minister Riyad Maliki said in Ramallah.

Hanan Ashrawi, a veteran Palestinia­n leader, noted the timing of the sudden White House invitation to Netanyahu and Gantz.

“Note that the 28th [of January] was the date of the Knesset’s immunity vote on Netanyahu’s corruption charges,” she said on Twitter. “Add to it Trump’s impeachmen­t issues & you have a lethal diversiona­ry tactic at the expense of Palestinia­n rights & int’l law-criminalit­y+ personal agendas=no peace.”

 ?? Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, both facing domestic pressures, heaped praise on each other at the White House.
Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck PRESIDENT TRUMP and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, both facing domestic pressures, heaped praise on each other at the White House.

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