Santa Fe New Mexican

President heads to Israel in pursuit of ‘ultimate deal’

- By Julie Pace and Josef Federman

JERUSALEM — President Donald Trump has cast the elusive pursuit of peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns as the “ultimate deal.” But he will step foot in Israel having offered few indication­s of how he plans to achieve what so many of his predecesso­rs could not.

Trump has handed son-inlaw Jared Kushner and longtime business lawyer Jason Greenblatt the assignment of charting the course toward a peace process. The White House-driven effort is a sharp shift from the practice of previous U.S. administra­tions that typically gave secretarie­s of state those responsibi­lities.

Kushner and Greenblatt were to accompany Trump on his two-day visit, set to begin Monday and include separate meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Trump also planned to visit the Holocaust memorial Yad Vashem and the Western Wall, an important Jewish holy site.

On the eve of Trump’s visit, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Security Cabinet approved several confidence-building measures, including constructi­on permits for Palestinia­ns near their cities in parts of the West Bank that had previously been off limits, a senior official said. Under interim agreements 60 percent of the West Bank, known as Area C, site of Israel’s settlement­s, is under Israeli control and Palestinia­n developmen­t there has mostly been forbidden by Israel.

Speaking on condition of anonymity in line with protocol, he said the package also includes economic concession­s and opening the border crossing between the West Bank and Jordan.

White House aides have played down expectatio­ns for significan­t progress on the peace process during Trump’s stop, casting it as more symbolic than substantiv­e. Yet Trump may still need to engage in some delicate diplomacy following revelation­s that he disclosed highly classified intelligen­ce Israel obtained about the Islamic State group with top Russian officials, without Israel’s permission.

Israel also has expressed concern about the $110 billion arms sale to Saudi Arabia that Trump announced Saturday in Riyadh. Yuval Steinitz, a senior Cabinet minister and Netanyahu confidant, called Saudi Arabia “a hostile country” and said the deal was “definitely something that should trouble us.”

David Friedman, the new U.S. ambassador to Israel, told the newspaper Israel Hayom that Trump’s goal at the start is simply “to begin a discussion that would hopefully lead to peace.”

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Donald Trump

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