The Phnom Penh Post

Abbas ready to meet Netanyahu amid peace efforts

- Sarah Benhaida

MAHMUD Abbas said yesterday Donald Trump was expected to visit the Palestinia­n territorie­s “soon” and that he was ready to meet Israel’s prime minister as part of the US president’s peace efforts.

Trump is expected to visit Israel later this month as part of his first foreign trip and the Palestinia­n president said “we are looking forward to his visit soon to Bethlehem” in the occupied West Bank, with speculatio­n it will occur on May 23.

“We told him that we were ready to collaborat­e with him and meet the Israeli PM [Benjamin Netanyahu]under his auspices to build peace,” Abbas told reporters during talks with German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

Abbas met Trump in Washington last week for their first face-to-face talks.

Trump announced last week that his first foreign trip as president will include stops in Saudi Arabia, Israel and the Vatican – the spiritual centres of Islam, Judaism and Catholicis­m.

The stop in Israel is expected on May 22, though it has not been officially confirmed. A senior Trump aide last week did not rule out the possibilit­y of a presidenti­al visit to theWest Bank, but said that it was likely to be contingent on security and Abbas taking concrete steps towards peace.

Trump has been seeking ways to restart moribund Israeli-Palestinia­n peace efforts.

As he hosted Abbas in Washington, Trump confidentl­y predicted that a peace agreement was within grasp, brushing aside the complexiti­es of a decades-old conflict that has bedevilled successive US leaders.

Embassy move

Abbas said yesterday that “we told him again of our commitment to a peace based on justice, with internatio­nal resolution­s and the two-state solution as references”. Trump has, however, sent mixed signals over the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

He backed away from the US commitment to the two-state solution – Israel and an independen­t Palestinia­n state side-by-side – when he met Netanyahu in February.

He said he would support a single state if it led to peace, delighting Israeli right-wingers who want to see their country annex most of the occupied West Bank.

Trump also vowed during his campaign to move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to the disputed city of Jerusalem, a prospect that alarmed Palestinia­ns but which has been put on the back burner for now.

At the same time, he has urged Israel to hold back on settlement building in the West Bank, a longstandi­ng concern of Palestinia­ns and much of the world.

One of Trump’s top advisers, Jason Greenblatt, held wide-ranging talks with both Israelis and Palestinia­ns during a visit in March.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP ?? Anti-Zionist Orthodox Jews of the Naturei Karta movement hold Palestinia­n and US flags to greet Palestinia­n President Mahmud Abbas at the White House in Washington, DC, on May 3.
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP Anti-Zionist Orthodox Jews of the Naturei Karta movement hold Palestinia­n and US flags to greet Palestinia­n President Mahmud Abbas at the White House in Washington, DC, on May 3.

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