The Jerusalem Post

Pompeo hints more Trump announceme­nts on Israel to come

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

US policy toward Israel will continue in the same vein in the coming weeks, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in an interview with The Jerusalem Post on Friday.

Asked whether the US would find ways to further entrench the principles of US President Donald Trump’s Vision for Peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns – which calls for Israel’s final borders to include over 30% of Judea and Samaria and most of east Jerusalem – such as recognizin­g Israeli sovereignt­y in those parts of its capital, Pompeo would not confirm specific policies that are under considerat­ion.

However, he added: “There’s every reason to expect that the direction of travel for US policy with respect to Israel will continue.”

Pompeo’s remarks came the day after he announced that products exported by Israelis in Judea and Samaria to the US would be labeled “Made in

Israel,” and that the US would consider the anti- Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions ( BDS) movement to be antisemiti­c and all funding would be revoked from its affiliates.

The announceme­nts came as he visited the Psagot Winery in Sha’ar Binyamin, making him the first US secretary of state to visit a West Bank settlement, and soon after he became the first to visit the Golan Heights.

The text of the BDS announceme­nt also applies to entities that boycott “any territory controlled by Israel.” This meets another policy objective of Pompeo, who sought to declare several human rights organizati­ons antisemiti­c. That plan was leaked to the media last month and was shelved amid an uproar in the State Department.

Asked if his new policy applies to organizati­ons like Amnesty Internatio­nal, which have called to boycott settlement­s, Pompeo responded: “I think the policy is pretty clear. We are going to continue to apply that policy against existing facts on the ground – and when it’s applicable, we’ll apply it.”

Amid all the announceme­nts, the Trump administra­tion’s policies to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions did not come up as much in the public statements on Pompeo’s three- day trip to Israel.

But on Friday, Pompeo reaffirmed that the military option against Iran is still on the table, even as the maximum

sanctions campaign continues: “The administra­tion has been clear on that for its entire four years; there is no reason that would change today or tomorrow.”

As for whether the Trump administra­tion would give bunker buster bombs to Israel, which would allow it to attack Iranian nuclear sites – as a new bipartisan bill in Congress would allow – Pompeo would not comment, but said they will “continue to do all the things we have done previously.”

“Consistent with what we have done to date, we have tried in each case to build out an enormous coalition [ against Iran] and we have successful­ly done that [ in a way] that understand­s the things that create opportunit­ies in the Middle East and that reduce risk to Israel – and therefore, risk to the US as well,” he said.

Asked about the likelihood that a Biden administra­tion would seek to reverse Trumpera policies related to Israel on Iran, the Palestinia­ns and settlement­s, Pompeo wouldn’t quite admit that his time in office is, in all likelihood, ending in two months – in keeping with his boss US President Donald Trump’s continuing challenge to the election results that are in favor of Democratic candidate Joe Biden.

“We’re still counting votes in the US, so there’s not much game in talking about that, other than to say we’re very convinced that we have made the Middle East safer, and the policies we put in place are the right ones,” Pompeo said.

Apparently referring to Biden’s declared intention to return to the JCPOA, the secretary of state said: “It cannot be the case that rewarding Iranian intransige­nce – rewarding terror, rewarding Iranians for building their enrichment programs – is the right course of action to make Israel safer.

“It’s our firm belief that the continuati­on of the things we’ve been doing leads to a very increased likelihood of a safer, more prosperous Middle East, and that our friends in Israel will be safer and more secure as a result of that as well,” he stated.

The sanctions campaign on Iran has been “pretty successful,” in Pompeo’s assessment, and “we will continue to do that for as long as the country demands it.”

“I remember when we first began the maximum pressure campaign,” he recounted. “We had withdrawn from the JCPOA [ Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, the 2015 Iran deal], and the world said this will never work; American sanctions alone won’t work. Well, they have significan­tly reduced Iran’s capacity to foment harm around the world.”

Sanctions have not fundamenta­lly changed Iran’s behavior, Pompeo admitted, but the Iranians are not able to fund proxies in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon

as much as they had before, and as much as they would have “had we continued to pile pallets of cash” to send to Iran, as occurred during the Obama administra­tion.

“The path that the president took denied the regime their resources to continue to put Israel and the Middle East at risk,” Pompeo explained.

Not only did the maximum pressure campaign deny Iran money, it also sent a message throughout the Middle East that isolated Iran and facilitate­d the Abraham Accords between Iran and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, he said.

Pompeo would not discuss which other Arab countries may establish open diplomatic relations with Israel, but he said he is still working on it.

“I believe in all my heart that the Trump administra­tion policies that we have set up created the conditions for those leaders to make exactly that decision [ to normalize ties with Israel] – and if they do, it will be a glorious thing for the region,” he said.

“The people of those countries will be better off, [ having] more prosperity and opportunit­y. They’ll get access to Israeli technology and smarts and creativity and vice- versa. There will be better security relationsh­ips and diplomatic relationsh­ips.”

Pompeo added: “The Middle East deserves a set of understand­ings that have Israel as part of the solution here in the Middle East. The Abraham Accords is the instrument for achieving that, and it’s been glorious to be part of a team that has helped these nations get to this place.”

Another factor Pompeo cited in leading up to the Abraham Accords was Trump’s peace plan disproving “the notion that you can’t do anything until you solve the Israel- Palestinia­n conflict… It was a preconditi­on to do anything in the Middle East that we can’t begin to build peace, prosperity and stability in the Middle East until we solve that conflict. President Trump has demonstrat­ed that was false for all of these years.”

Beyond the signal that the Abraham Accords broadcast to the Palestinia­ns, the Trump administra­tion also recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, closed the PLO’s office in Washington and slashed most aid to the Palestinia­ns – some because of the “Taylor Force Act” denying the Palestinia­n Authority funding as long as it continues its “pay for slay” program to pay terrorists in prison and their families and some beyond that.

The PA almost totally cut ties with the Trump administra­tion and cut off cooperatio­n with Israel for several months this year, but it seems like economic pressure has done the job. The PA has renewed cooperatio­n with Israel, including accepting the taxes and tariffs Jerusalem collects, and is reportedly weighing downsizing of the “pay for slay” program. The timing is such that it would allow President- elect Joe Biden to reinstate aid to the PA next year.

Pompeo said that Trump’s Vision for Peace “demarcated a

brighter future for the Palestinia­n people” – and the fact that the Palestinia­ns refused to negotiate based on that plan hurts them.

“We hope that Palestinia­n policy will come to reflect the will of Palestinia­ns,” he said. “If it does, I am confident that the Palestinia­n leadership would come to the table. They’d sit down, have hard- fought negotiatio­ns. They’d have disagreeme­nts we’ve had for decades, but they can come to a set of common understand­ings that would deliver a really good outcome and a much better life for the people that live in Judea and Samaria, and the Gaza Strip as well.

“These are places where people are living in very difficult conditions, and it’s most unfortunat­e and unnecessar­y. It’s been brought to them by failed leadership: whether it’s the [ Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad] in Gaza or Hamas in Gaza or the leadership in the West Bank today. It’s most unfortunat­e.” • asurim

with Esther many times.

The prime minister released a statement on Saturday in which he welcomed the move to terminate Pollard’s restrictio­ns. Netanyahu additional­ly thanked Dermer for handling relations with the US administra­tion responsibl­y and with sensitivit­y.

Netanyahu has been committed to Pollard’s release for many years, and worked tirelessly for his return. He said that he is awaiting Pollard’s arrival in Israel.

Edelstein, who was the first cabinet minister to visit Pollard in prison 23 years ago, said he was overjoyed by the news.

“Israel is waiting for Pollard,” he said. “This is happy news after the state abandoned him for too many long years. Soon we will be able to see Jonathan in Israel.”

Maayan Hoffman and Cody

 ?? ( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) ?? MIKE POMPEO
( Marc Israel Sellem/ The Jerusalem Post) MIKE POMPEO

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