The Oklahoman

Pence goes to Mideast, making 5th stop in Israel

- BY KEN THOMAS AND TOM LOBIANCO

WASHINGTON — Vice President Mike Pence is making his fifth visit to Israel, returning to a region he’s visited “a million times” in his heart.

An evangelica­l Christian with strong ties to the Holy Land, Pence this time comes packing two key policy decisions in his bags that have long been top priorities for him: designatin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and curtailing aid for Palestinia­ns.

Pence’s office said he planned to depart as scheduled as U.S. lawmakers sought to avert a federal government shutdown at midnight Friday. Alyssa Farah, a Pence spokeswoma­n, said the trip was “integral to America’s national security and diplomatic objectives” and would go on as scheduled. Pence was set to depart Friday evening, and Air Force Two was expected to land in Ireland for a refueling stop early Saturday en route to Cairo.

Since his days in Congress a decade ago, Pence has played a role in pushing both for the shift in U.S. policy related to the capital and for placing limits on funding for Palestinia­n causes long criticized by Israel.

Traveling to Israel just as Palestinia­ns have condemned recent decisions by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, Pence will arrive in the region as a longtime stalwart supporter of Israel who has questioned the notion of the U.S. serving as an “honest broker” in the stalled peace process.

“The United States certainly wants to be honest, but we don’t want to be a broker,” Pence once told the Christian Broadcasti­ng Network in 2010. “A broker doesn’t take sides. A broker negotiates between parties of equals.”

The vice president will hold four days of meetings in Egypt, Jordan and Israel during his visit, the first to the region by a senior administra­tion official since Trump announced plans in December to designate Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and begin the process of moving the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv, angering Palestinia­n leaders.

His trip will also follow Tuesday’s announceme­nt that the U.S. is withholdin­g $65 million of a planned $125 million funding installmen­t to the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which provides health care, education and social services to Palestinia­ns in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.

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