The Palm Beach Post

Two-state solution still is possible, Pence says

He seeks to reassure Jordan king U.S. for renewed peace effort.

- By Ken Thomas

AMMAN, JORDAN — Jordan’s king appealed Sunday to Vice President Mike Pence to “rebuild trust and confidence” in the possibilit­y of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, following fallout from the Trump administra­tion’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

Pence tried to reassure the monarch that the U.S. was committed to restarting peace efforts and to a twostate solution, if both sides agree. Such a caveat deviates from long-standing U.S. support for that approach as the only possible outcome of any peace deal.

Trump’s announceme­nt on Jerusalem last month infuriated the Palestinia­ns, who seek the Israeli-annexed eastern sector of the city as a future capital. They accused the U.S. of siding with Israel and said Washington can no longer serve as a mediator.

Jerusalem is the emotional centerpiec­e of the long-running conflict, and Trump’s policy shift set off protests and condemnati­on across Arab and Muslim countries.

It posed a dilemma for Abdullah, a staunch U.S. ally who derives his political legitimacy in large part from the Hashemite dynasty’s role as guardian of a key Muslim site in Jerusalem. Any perceived threat to Muslim claims in the city is seen as a challenge to Jordan, where a large segment of the population is of Palestinia­n origin.

Pence told the king that the U.S. has committed “to continue to respect Jordan’s role as the custodian of holy sites, that we take no position on boundaries and final status.”

It was a message Pence relayed Saturday in talks with Egypt’s president.

Later, after meeting U.S. troops near the Syrian border, Pence said he and Abdullah had “a very frank discussion.”

“Look, friends occasional­ly have disagreeme­nts and we agreed to disagree on the decision by the United States to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. But what we agreed on was the need for all parties to come back to the table,” Pence said.

“The Palestinia­n Authority has been absent from direct negotiatio­ns since 2014. And I hope I impressed upon King Abdullah our earnest desire to restart the peace process,” Pence said.

Abdullah expressed concerns about the regional fallout from the Jerusalem decision.

“Today we have a major challenge to overcome, especially with some of the rising frustratio­ns,” he said. He described the Pence visit as a mission “to rebuild trust and confidence” in getting to a two-state solution, in which a state of Palestine would be establishe­d in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in 1967.

 ?? RAAD ADAYLEH / AP ?? Vice President Mike Pence and wife Karen attend a lunch hosted by Jordan’s King Abdullah II at the Husseiniye­h Palace in Amman, Jordan, on Sunday.
RAAD ADAYLEH / AP Vice President Mike Pence and wife Karen attend a lunch hosted by Jordan’s King Abdullah II at the Husseiniye­h Palace in Amman, Jordan, on Sunday.

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