Arab Times

Trump pushes for peace in Mideast

‘Put aside pain of past’

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JERUSALEM, May 23, (AP): President Donald Trump on Tuesday pushed for elusive peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns, calling on both sides to put aside the “pain and disagreeme­nts of the past.”

Trump met with both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas during his quick stop in the region. Speaking at the Israel Museum, he declared both sides ready to move forward, though there were no tangible signs of the dormant peace process being revived.

“Palestinia­ns are ready to reach for peace,” Trump said. Turning to the prime minister, who joined him for the speech, Trump said, “Benjamin Netanyahu wants peace.”

A longtime businessma­n, Trump has cast Middle East peace as the “ultimate deal” and has tasked his son-in-law Jared Kushner and former real estate lawyer Jason Greenblatt with charting a course forward. Still, White House officials had downplayed the prospects for a breakthrou­gh on this trip, saying it was important to manage their ambitions as they wade into terrain that has tripped up more experience­d diplomats.

The president notably avoided all of the thorny issues that have stymied peace efforts for decades. He did not weigh in Israeli settlement­s, the status of Jerusalem or even whether the US would continue to insist on a two-state solution giving the Palestinia­ns sovereign territory.

Aides said the approach was purposeful, and the normally free-wheeling Trump was wellaware of the risks of veering off script on issue where every word is intensely scrutinize­d.

From Israel, Trump was heading to Italy for an audience with Pope Francis. He’ll close his ambitious first foreign trip at a pair of summits in Brussels and Sicily, where his reception from European leaders may be less effusive than his welcome in Israel and Saudi Arabia, his opening stop on the trip.

Trump and Netanyahu in particular lavished praise on each other during their multiple meetings. The prime minister, who had a frosty relationsh­ip with Trump’s predecesso­r, leapt to his feet when the president declared Tuesday that his administra­tion “will always stand with Israel.”

Yet some Israeli officials are less certain of Trump. He’s taken a tougher than expected line on settlement­s, saying he doesn’t believe they help the peace process, though he’s stopped short of calling for a full constructi­on freeze. He’s also backed away from his campaign pledge to move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, bending to the same security risks as other presidents who have made that promise.

At the same time, Abbas and the Palestinia­ns have been pleasantly surprised by their dealings with Trump. On Tuesday morning, Trump met with Abbas in Bethlehem, traveling across the barrier surroundin­g much of the biblical city, which serves as a visual reminder of the complexiti­es of the conflict in the region.

Abbas said he was keen to “keep the door open to dialogue with our Israeli neighbors.” He reiterated the Palestinia­ns’ demands, including establishi­ng a capital in East Jerusalem, territory Israel claims as well, insisting that “our problem is not with the Jewish religion, it’s with the occupation and settlement­s, and with Israel not recognizin­g the state of Palestine.”

After his meeting with Abbas, Trump returned to Jerusalem for a solAttacks

emn tribute to the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust. On a visit to the Yad Vashem memorial, the president and first lady Melania Trump laid a wreath on a stone slab under which ashes from some of those killed in concentrat­ion camps are buried. They were joined by Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, as well as daughter Ivanka Trump and Kushner.

The White House said Trump was being updated on the attacks in Manchester, England, by his national security team. More than 20 people were killed by an apparent suicide bomber. There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity.

“So many young, beautiful innocent people living and enjoying their lives, murdered by evil losers in life,” Trump said, echoing the theme he presented during his meetings with Arab leaders in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The White House said it was Trump’s idea to use the term “evil losers.”

Trump declared that he would not

call the attackers “monsters,” a term he believes they would prefer, instead choosing “losers,” a longtime favorite Trump insult and one he has directed at comedian Rosie O’Donnell, Cher and others.

Trump’s visit to Jerusalem has been laden with religious symbolism. He toured the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which by Christian tradition is where Jesus was crucified and the location of his tomb. Wearing a black skullcap, he became the first sitting president to visit the Western Wall in Jerusalem’s Old City, the most holy site at which Jews can pray.

Trump was also joined at the wall by his family, who separated by gender to pray. The president and Kushner visited one side, while the first daughter and first lady visited a portion of the site reserved for women. Trump approached alone and placed his hand on the stone.

The visit raised questions about whether the US would indicate the site is Israeli territory. The US has never recognized Israeli sovereignt­y over parts of the Old City seized in the 1967 war.

The White House struggled to answer the question. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley declared the site part of Israel, while US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Monday dodged the question. Trump himself never commented.

Trump paid a short visit to Israel’s national Holocaust memorial on Tuesday, calling the Nazi exterminat­ion of 6 million Jews “the most savage crime against God and his children” during the most sensitive stop on his two-day visit to Israel.

Trump had come under criticism in some quarters for planning just a brief half-hour stop at Yad Vashem, following a series of missteps by his administra­tion on issues of concern to the Jewish American community — such as inadequate­ly denouncing the antiSemiti­c rhetoric of some of his supporters and appearing cavalier at times about the Holocaust.

But Trump pleased his hosts in Israel by taking a strong stand in expressing sympathy for Holocaust victims and support for the Jewish state.

In a solemn ceremony, Trump rekindled the memorial’s eternal flame and laid a wreath in honor of the 6 million Jews killed. A children’s choir sang and a cantor recited a special prayer for the dead.

In brief comments, Trump called the Holocaust “history’s darkest hour.”

“Millions of wonderful and beautiful lives — men, women and children — were extinguish­ed as part of a systematic attempt to eliminate the Jewish people,” he said. “It is our solemn duty to remember, to mourn, to grieve and to honor every single life that was so cruelly and viciously taken.”

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