The Columbus Dispatch

Washington reverses rule on Palestinia­n relations

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JERUSALEM – The Biden administra­tion is restoring a line of communicat­ion for the Palestinia­ns that had been canceled by former President Donald Trump.

The move, announced Thursday ahead of a possible visit by President Joe Biden to Israel and the occupied West Bank, means Palestinia­ns will deal directly with the State Department in Washington rather than go through the U.S. ambassador in Israel first.

Reflecting the change, the former Palestinia­n Affairs Unit changed its name Thursday to the U.S. Office of Palestinia­n Affairs.

In a statement, the newly renamed office said the move was meant to “strengthen our diplomatic reporting and public diplomacy engagement.”

“We felt that it was important to reintroduc­e separate reporting lines to Washington on Israeli and Palestinia­n issues, by our respective teams on the ground that focus on these issues,” it said, adding that it was reinstatin­g a system that was in place for decades before Trump’s cancellati­on.

The decision falls short of the Palestinia­n

demand that the United States reopen its Jerusalem consulate, which for years functioned as a de facto embassy to the Palestinia­ns.

There was no immediate reaction from the Palestinia­ns or Israel.

The Trump administra­tion shuttered the consulate, in one of a series of controvers­ial moves that favored Israel over the Palestinia­ns.

Under Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken pledged to reopen it, a move that Israel said would challenge its sovereignt­y over the city.

It was thought that such a reopening could help mend U.S. ties with the Palestinia­ns, ruptured under Trump. The U.S. has so far failed to reopen the consulate, apparently in fear of upsetting ties with Israel or destabiliz­ing its fragile coalition government.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has said there was no room in Jerusalem for another American mission.

The Palestinia­n Foreign Ministry said it views the reopening of the consulate as part of the internatio­nal community’s commitment­s to ending Israel’s decades-long occupation of territorie­s the Palestinia­ns seek for their future state.

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT/AP ?? The U.S. consulate building in Jerusalem for years functioned as a de facto embassy to the Palestinia­ns. It was shuttered during the Trump administra­tion.
ARIEL SCHALIT/AP The U.S. consulate building in Jerusalem for years functioned as a de facto embassy to the Palestinia­ns. It was shuttered during the Trump administra­tion.

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