Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump hosts Netanyahu

President considers visit to Jerusalem to open new embassy

- By Peter Baker and David M. Halbfinger

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Monday that he might visit Israel in May to preside over the opening of a new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem in what would be a potent act of symbolism, even as he expressed optimism that Palestinia­ns angered by the move would nonetheles­s return to the peacemakin­g table.

“We’re looking at coming,” Trump said as he hosted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel at the White House. “If I can, I will.”

While Palestinia­n leaders have broken off communicat­ions with the Trump administra­tion over the president’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, Trump suggested that they would resume discussion­s and asserted that he still has “a good chance” of forging a peace deal that has eluded his predecesso­rs for decades.

Palestinia­n leaders, who also claim Jerusalem as the capital of a future state, have given no public indication that they would return to discussion­s any time soon. In response to the president’s Jerusalem move, they declared that they no longer saw the United States as a neutral broker with the Israelis. Trump then withheld $65 million in aid for Palestinia­n refugees.

But Monday’s meeting between Trump and Netanyahu in the Oval Office turned into a celebratio­n of the embassy move that both hailed as a sign that Israeli-U.S. relations have never been stronger. While other presidents have promised such a move and Congress has passed a measure officially declaring Jerusalem to be Israel’s capital, no president followed through until Trump, out of fear of angering the Palestinia­ns and other Arabs and prejudging a final peace agreement.

Netanyahu lavished praise on Trump for the Jerusalem decision, comparing him to three of the most important figures in the history of the Jewish people: King Cyrus of Persia, who 2,500 years ago freed the Jews from exile in Babylon and permitted them to return to Jerusalem; Lord Arthur James Balfour, the British foreign secretary whose declaratio­n a century ago first paved the way for a Jewish homeland in Palestine; and President Harry S. Truman, who recognized Israel’s existence 11 minutes after it declared independen­ce in 1948.

Just as Israelis remember those figures, Netanyahu said, “We remember how a few weeks ago President Donald J. Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Mr. President, this will be remembered by our people through the ages. As as you just said, others talked about it. You did it.”

Unlike Trump, however, Netanyahu mentioned the goal of peace with the Palestinia­ns only in passing and focused instead on the topic he always makes his top priority when he visits Washington, namely the threat from Iran. He hoped to use the visit to encourage Trump to tear up or renegotiat­e President Barack Obama’s agreement with Tehran limiting its nuclear program, deeming it insufficie­ntly tough.

“Iran must be stopped,” Netanyahu said. “That is our common challenge.”

The meeting came at a time when both leaders are under increasing domestic pressure from investigat­ions bearing down on them and their families. In the hours before the Israeli leader’s arrival, Trump typed out a Twitter message suggesting once again that the special counsel investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election originated from partisan spying by the Obama administra­tion.

Netanyahu, for his part, was preparing for the meeting with Trump at Blair House, the U.S. government guest residence across from the White House, when news broke in Israel that a onetime adviser and confidant had made a deal with police to turn over tapes of the prime minister and his wife in connection with a corruption case. The adviser, Nir Hefetz, was the third confidant of the prime minister to turn on him.

 ?? TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, meets with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office in Washington, D.C.
TOM BRENNER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, meets with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office in Washington, D.C.

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