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In Israel, president sees chance for peace

Trump stresses prospect of peace on visit to Israel

- By Michael A. Memoli Washington Bureau michael.memoli@latimes.com

Starting the second leg of his eight-day foreign trip, President Donald Trump on Monday said he wants to make progress on what he has called the “ultimate deal,” a Middle East peace accord to end generation­s of conflict. Trump also denied that he ever “mentioned the word or the name Israel” after a reporter asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he was concerned by reports that Trump had shared highly sensitive intelligen­ce.

JERUSALEM — President Donald Trump on Monday took in the sweeping history of Jerusalem’s Old City on a visit in which he hopes to make some of his own, urging Israeli and Palestinia­n leaders to take strides toward peace that have eluded U.S. leaders for decades.

Starting the second leg of his eight-day foreign trip, Trump said he wants to make progress on what he has called the “ultimate deal,” a Middle East peace accord to end generation­s of conflict.

“We have before us a rare opportunit­y to bring security and stability and peace to this region and to its people,” Trump said in a ceremony after he landed at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport. “But we can only get there working together. There is no other way.”

Trump has yet to offer a diplomatic initiative to restart negotiatio­ns, no less break the broader political impasse. Nor is it clear that the Israelis or the Palestinia­ns have the inclinatio­n or political capital to make substantia­l progress given their deep divisions.

Still, Trump raised the prospect of a peace deal during each of his three public appearance­s with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, though in the third he conceded it was perhaps the “toughest” deal to make.

Netanyahu leads a fragile coalition that depends on right-leaning parties that strongly resist the kinds of territoria­l or political concession­s to Palestinia­ns that a peace deal likely would require.

So he sought continuall­y to steer the conversati­on toward Iran, a common foe for Israel and the Sunni Arab leaders whom Trump visited over the weekend in Saudi Arabia.

Trump’s call in a speech Sunday in Riyadh to isolate Iran to neutralize the threat it poses through proxy militant groups “not only helps security but also helps propel the possibilit­y of reconcilia­tion and peace between Israel and the Arab world,” Netanyahu said.

But he said Israel has not changed its own formulatio­n for peace, one that Saudi Arabia and most other Arab states have rejected until now.

“The peace we seek is a genuine and a durable one in which the Jewish state is recognized, security remains in Israel’s hands and the conflict ends once and for all,” the Israeli leader said.

Trump will travel Tuesday to Bethlehem, in the West Bank, to meet with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, who visited the White House last month.

In his comments Monday, Trump said he had “found new reasons for hope” in his meetings with Arab leaders in Riyadh.

Echoing a White House argument, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the common threat of terrorism has united Sunni Arab nations, Israel and the United States in a way that did not exist in the past.

“I think (Trump) feels like there’s a moment in time here,” Tillerson told reporters traveling with the president on Air Force One.

“I think the president has indicated he’s willing to put his own personal efforts into this, if the Israelis and the Palestinia­n leadership are ready to be serious about engaging as well,” he said.

Trump’s domestic troubles over Russia reemerged during his visit Monday, one with potential diplomatic consequenc­es with Israel.

After a reporter asked Netanyahu if he was concerned by reports that Trump had shared highly sensitive intelligen­ce about a terrorist threat with two senior Russian officials in an Oval Office meeting on May 10, Trump jumped in to deny that he ever “mentioned the word or the name Israel.”

“They’re all saying I did,” he said, pointing to reporters. “So you have another story wrong. Never mentioned the word Israel.”

News accounts never said that Trump had identified Israel as the source of the intelligen­ce, only that he had divulged intelligen­ce from an unnamed allied country that did not want it shared.

Subsequent news reports, citing anonymous sources, identified the country as Israel, and said Israeli intelligen­ce officials were furious that Trump had shared the material in violation of spying protocol.

Netanyahu avoided the intelligen­ce controvers­y. He cut through the shouts of multiple questioner­s to say simply, “Intelligen­ce cooperatio­n is terrific. It’s never been better.”

Trump heads to the Vatican after his two-day visit here, and the White House says his visit to holy sites of three of the world’s major religions demonstrat­es his commitment to religious tolerance and peace.

And so Trump is mixing religious symbolism with his substantiv­e discussion­s.

Wearing a yarmulke, he touched the stones of the Western Wall in Jerusalem and, as cameras clicked away, tucked a private note into one of the crannies. Nearby, first lady Melania Trump and first daughter Ivanka visited the women’s area of the wall, one of Judaism’s most sacred sites.

Trump also visited the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, where Christians believe Jesus Christ was crucified and later resurrecte­d.

“Words fail to capture the experience,” he said at day’s end. Fireworks later lit the skies over Jerusalem.

Trump is the first sitting president to visit the Western Wall and the first president to visit Israel so early in his term.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump touches the stones of the Western Wall in Jerusalem during his visit.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump touches the stones of the Western Wall in Jerusalem during his visit.
 ?? RONEN ZVULUN/AFP ?? President Donald Trump visits the Western Wall, the first sitting U.S. president to do so.
RONEN ZVULUN/AFP President Donald Trump visits the Western Wall, the first sitting U.S. president to do so.

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