Baltimore Sun

Israeli leader Netanyahu may seek U.S. reset

Israeli leader arriving Tuesday after 8 years of friction with White House

- By Tracy Wilkinson tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrives in Washington on Tuesday hoping to find in President Donald Trump a kindred spirit and compliant ally after eight years of personal friction with President Barack Obama.

The reality may be more complicate­d.

As a candidate, Trump signaled he would show staunch support for Netanyahu and his allies in Israel in crucial ways, including backing Israel’s growing settlement­s in the West Bank, moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, and tearing up the Iran nuclear deal.

He also hinted he might reverse decades of U.S. policy by abandoning the search for a so-called twostate solution that envisions an Israeli nation and a Palestinia­n nation living side by side in peace.

But after three rocky weeks in office, Trump has backed down on a raft of foreign policy issues — reaffirmin­g the “one China” policy with Beijing and vowing “strong support” for the NATO military alliance in Europe — and he now appears to be reevaluati­ng his Israel policy as well.

Trump has publicly tapped the brakes on his support for expanding Jewish settlement­s on disputed land in the Palestinia­n West Bank, for example.

On Friday, Trump told an Israeli newspaper that “going forward with settlement­s” is not a “good thing for peace,” a position that puts him far closer to traditiona­l U.S. policy, and to Obama, than before.

Settlement­s “don’t help the (peace) process. I can say that,’’ Trump told Israel Today, which supports Netanyahu and is owned by American casino magnate and conservati­ve activist Sheldon Adelson. “There is (only) so much land left. And every time you take land for settlement­s, there is less land left.”

That appears to put him at odds with Netanyahu, whose government has approved 6,000 new homes in existing settlement­s in the West Bank and East Jerusalem since Trump’s inaugurati­on.

It also may put Trump in conflict with his proposed pick for U.S. ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, a fierce advocate and financial backer of the settlement­s.

The first signs of change at the White House came last week, following a threeday visit to Washington by King Abdullah II of Jordan, a strategic ally that neighbors Israel and that works closely with Washington against Islamic State, alQaida and other militants.

Abdullah was the first Arab leader to meet with Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and others in the new administra­tion.

He argued that moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem — the disputed city that both Israelis and Palestinia­ns claim as their capital — would be so provocativ­e as to threaten his own government.

Jordan’s Hashemite Kingdom is held as the protector of some of Islam’s most important holy sites, including Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem, giving it special authority in the Muslim world. It also is regarded as custodian of Holy Land Christian sites.

Another shift came after Rex Tillerson was sworn in as secretary of State on Feb. 1 and met with senior diplomats about policies in the Middle East.

The next day, after Tillerson telephoned Netanyahu, the White House issued a statement that warned it would not support further expansion of settlement­s.

While the Trump administra­tion did not consider settlement­s an obstacle to peace, it said, “The constructi­on of new settlement­s or the expansion of existing settlement­s beyond their current borders may not be helpful in achieving that goal.”

The White House did not deny a Jerusalem Post report the same day that said administra­tion officials had confirmed for the first time that Trump is committed to a comprehens­ive two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict negotiated between the parties.

Officials said Trump would discuss the issue with Netanyahu when he visits the White House on Wednesday.

Netanyahu had famously frosty relations with Obama, and he welcomed Trump’s election as a chance to find a more supportive partner in the White House.

“I imagine Netanyahu is looking to reset the U.S. Israeli relationsh­ip,” said Susie Gelman, chair of the Israel Policy Forum, an advocacy group that focuses on peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

Netanyahu believes he can strike common cause with Trump, according to diplomats and analysts, by enlisting Sunni-dominated Arab nations in a coalition against Iran and radical Islam, especially Islamic State.

But to keep Arab allies on board, Israel may need to make concession­s to the Palestinia­ns on settlement­s and other issues, several analysts said.

They suggested Trump use his deal-making skills when he sits down with Netanyahu.

Ilan Goldenberg, a Middle East expert who served in the State and Defense department­s in the Obama administra­tion, said Netanyahu is unlikely to try to mollify Arab countries. “I don’t see it happening with this Israeli government,” he said.

Netanyahu may be more interested in talking about Iran than Palestinia­n peace and moving the U.S. embassy.

Israel wants Washington to do more to punish Iran for supporting Shiite Muslim militants in Lebanon and elsewhere, testing ballistic missiles and other activities that have kept the region on edge.

“Netanyahu is going with ideas” on Iran, said Michael Oren, Israel’s deputy minister for diplomacy and a former ambassador to the United States. “The thrust would be to connect the nuclear deal with Iran’s other bad behavior.”

 ?? GALI TIBBON/ AFP ?? President Trump appears to be reevaluati­ng his policy on Israel, for which he expressed staunch support on the campaign trail, as Benjamin Netanyahu aims for better relations.
GALI TIBBON/ AFP President Trump appears to be reevaluati­ng his policy on Israel, for which he expressed staunch support on the campaign trail, as Benjamin Netanyahu aims for better relations.
 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ??
EVAN VUCCI/AP

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