Gulf News

Trump needs a specific roadmap to promote peace in the region

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Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

White House senior adviser Jared Kushner’s visit to the region to revive Palestinia­n-Israeli peace talks and the reinstatem­ent of Qatar’s ambassador to Iran were the topics discussed this week in the region’s papers

vailable accounts show that Jared Kushner arrived to and left the region empty-handed, pointed out the Jordan Times.

“Donald Trump, President of the United States, said he wanted a solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, but similar commitment­s were made by many of his predecesso­rs over the past half a century, with nothing to show for. It is not promises expressed in general terms, but specific roadmap, timetable and outcome, which are needed for any peace talks to start off on the right foot. If Trump wishes to make a real difference, he should ask his administra­tion to come up with specifics and clear

thoughts about a solution to this crucial Middle East problem. Anything else would only prolong the agony of the Palestinia­ns and deepen the radicalisa­tion of the sides involved and others who use the Palestinia­n problem as an excuse for their misguided acts.

The Kushner (above, left) trip could actually be considered something of a success if the US manages to identify an approach that Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu do not dismiss out of hand, said the Saudi Gazette.

“The problem is that the parties are long past this point. By now, they should have been at the end stage, not the beginning. If the US administra­tion needs to make its plans known soon, as is often reported, that goes double for Israel.

“It may be that the recent violence at Al Haram Al Sharif has accelerate­d the US administra­tion’s timetable and its desire to try to get something going before violence breaks out again. The thinking is logical, but time is running short.”

It seems Qatar has chosen the path of no return as it continues to persist with its hostility and conspiraci­es against its Arab neighbours, wrote the UAE’s Al Bayan.

“Qatar is taking actions, which prove that everything said about it is true, as it strives to normalise relations with Iran. Reinstatin­g its envoy in Iran is reckless and meaningles­s, as Qatar chose the wrong path at the wrong time, as if it is declaring its determinat­ion to continue with its policies of supporting terrorism, destructio­n and conspiraci­es.

“Qatar should not have taken such a step during such a critical time, particular­ly not when Chad had recently announced that it is shutting down the Qatar’s Embassy. While the Qatari regime is dispatchin­g its ambassador to the enemies of Arabs, it is also receiving its dismissed ambassador­s from African countries.”

The truth is, whether Qatar has an ambassador in Tehran or not and whether Tehran has an ambassador in Doha or not, the two countries’ pursuit to preserve balanced ties, even during the worst of times in the region, has not stopped, noted the London-based Pan-Arab paper Asharq Al Awsat.

“The new chapter in the Qatari alliance with Iran is that it is taking place directly, clearly and frankly. It is therefore proving right the four countries that have boycotted Doha. How can we possibly believe Doha’s trick of withdrawin­g its ambassador from Tehran when a major security agreement between the two sides still stands.

Saudi Arabia and the Gulf countries are not losing much in Qatar’s clear and open leaning towards the Persian bank of the Arab Gulf. Its stance may be provocativ­e as Iran is the spearhead of global terrorism and an alliance with it will put Qatar in the same boat.”

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