Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

France to convene talks to make Mideast point

Last-ditch try for peace really is more for show

- By ANGELA CHARLTON

PARIS — It sounds farfetched at best: holding a Mideast peace conference without Israelis, Palestinia­ns or the incoming U.S. government.

But the French organizers say that’s the whole point. They want Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President-elect Donald Trump to see that most of the world wants a two-state solution and is fed up with decades of conflict.

With chances for a Mideast peace deal lower than in years — perhaps a generation — French President Francois Hollande figures there’s nothing to lose.

French diplomats fear that Trump will unleash new tensions in the region by condoning settlement­s on land claimed by the Palestinia­ns and potentiall­y moving the U.S. Embassy to contested Jerusalem.

So more than 70 foreign ministers and other top envoys are gathering Sunday in Paris to urge the establishm­ent of a Palestinia­n state.

Netanyahu says the conference is “rigged” against Israel and declined an invitation to a special meeting afterward. Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas was initially expected, but his visit to Paris has been postponed.

Even the organizers know it’s symbolic; no one expects a breakthrou­gh. It’s aimed at presenting Trump with a collective internatio­nal push for peace once he takes office Friday.

For Obama’s outgoing government, Sunday’s meeting marks the bitter, disappoint­ing end of eight years of failed Israeli-Palestinia­n diplomacy.

According to a draft statement, the conference will urge Israel and the Palestinia­ns “to officially restate their commitment to the two-state solution.” It also will affirm that the internatio­nal community “will not recognize” changes to Israel’s pre-1967 lines without agreement by both sides.

Hollande’s government has been trying for years to revive peace-making, pointing to diplomatic successes like the 2015 Paris climate agreement, its improved relations with Israel over the past decade and hard line against Israeli rivals Iran and Syria.

But with Netanyahu snubbing the conference and Trump’s administra­tion “reserved” about it, according to a French diplomat, Sunday’s gathering looks increasing­ly like an effort to isolate Israel, not entice it to the negotiatin­g table.

Hollande too is a lame duck, leaving office in May — and his government has made no plans to follow up Sunday’s conference with enforcemen­t measures or outreach to Trump’s team.

The sides haven’t negotiated even indirectly since a failed U.S. peace effort in 2014. Palestinia­n attacks on civilians and incitement to violence have heightened tensions, as has expanded Israeli settlement building.

Israel has settled some 600,000 of its citizens in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, claimed by the Palestinia­ns for a future independen­t state. Israel captured both areas in the 1967 Mideast war. Netanyahu has ruled out a return to Israel’s 1967 lines, and many members of his coalition oppose Palestinia­n independen­ce.

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