Los Angeles Times

Pence’s Jerusalem vow

Vice president promises Israeli lawmakers that U.S. Embassy will open in holy city next year.

- By Brian Bennett and Tracy Wilkinson brian.bennett@latimes.com tracy.wilkinson@latimes.com Bennett reported from Jerusalem and Wilkinson from Washington.

JERUSALEM — Vice President Mike Pence told the Israeli parliament Monday that the United States will move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem next year, far faster than the State Department had indicated when President Trump decided last month to recognize the divided holy city as Israel’s capital.

By speeding up the embassy transfer, the White House signaled it was doubling down on its most provocativ­e Middle East policy and would ignore Arab allies who have urged a more measured approach to the politicall­y charged issue.

Trump’s Dec. 6 announceme­nt stunned many world leaders and reversed decades of U.S. policy, which held that the status of Jerusalem should be decided in final Israeli-Palestinia­n peace negotiatio­ns. Palestinia­ns also claim part of Jerusalem as the capital of a future independen­t state.

“In the weeks ahead, our administra­tion will advance its plan to open the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem — and that the United States Embassy will open before the end of next year,” Pence told the Knesset, the Israeli parliament.

“By finally recognizin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, the United States has chosen fact over fiction — and fact is the only true foundation for a just and lasting peace,” he added.

Twelve Arab members and one Jewish member, who had said they would boycott Pence’s speech, stood and shouted when Pence began talking. Several held signs that read, in English and Arabic, “Jerusalem is the capital of Palestine.” Security personnel removed the protesters from the chamber.

State Department officials had said that finding a new embassy site, designing the compound and completing constructi­on could take up to six years and cost $600 million to $1 billion to meet security concerns.

Pence’s remarks suggest the department will instead retrofit the U.S. Consulate in Arnona, a neighborho­od in West Jerusalem, to serve as the embassy. The consulate now issues visas and offers consular services to Americans in Israel.

Pence, who is visiting Israel for two days after brief stops in Egypt and Jordan, received repeated standing ovations in the Knesset. The body is dominated by hardright parties and supporters of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

At one point, when Pence reiterated that the United States would support a twostate solution — the longheld diplomatic goal of Israel and an independen­t Palestine existing side by side — only leftist members of the Knesset rose to applaud. Netanyahu and the hard-right factions were silent.

Pence also drew applause when he addressed another Trump priority that is popular with the Israeli right: torpedoing the landmark Iranian nuclear deal.

The 2015 accord, which the United States and five other world powers negotiated with Iran, put strict limits on Tehran’s ability to enrich uranium or potentiall­y acquire nuclear weapons in exchange for lifting internatio­nal sanctions.

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies and the United Nations nuclear watchdog agency have said Iran is meeting its obligation­s under the agreement. But Trump has vowed to withdraw from the deal in May, and reimpose energyrela­ted sanctions on Iran, unless it is “fixed” to eliminate sunset clauses and to link it to Iran’s developmen­t of ballistic missiles.

“The Iran nuclear deal is a disaster, and the United States of America will no longer certify this ill-conceived agreement” unless the changes are made, Pence said.

Pence met with Netanyahu before going to the Knesset, and he uttered the phrase U.S. leaders had avoided for years while negotiator­s sought, so far in vain, to hammer out a peace deal.

“It is my great honor on behalf of the president of the United States to be in Israel’s capital, Jerusalem,” Pence said as Netanyahu beamed at his side.

Netanyahu told reporters that he has welcomed hundreds of world leaders, but that this was the first time a visiting leader could say he was in Israel’s capital.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert confirmed that the new embassy will open by the end of 2019, but said decisions on the “safety and security of personnel” were pending.

The consulate in Jerusalem sits near the traditiona­l dividing line between eastern and western parts of the city, often a focal point for anti-Israel and anti-U.S. demonstrat­ions.

On Tuesday, Pence will visit Yad Vashem, Israel’s official memorial to victims of the Holocaust, and the Western Wall.

He is not scheduled to meet any Palestinia­ns. The president of the Palestinia­n Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, had ruled out meeting Pence or joining any negotiatio­ns with the Trump administra­tion because of the decision on Jerusalem and the subsequent White House move to slash aid to a U.N. agency that helps Palestinia­n refugees.

 ?? Ariel Schalit Pool Photo ?? THIRTEEN MEMBERS of Israel’s parliament protested during Mike Pence’s speech, some holding signs reading, “Jerusalem is the capital of Palestine.” Security personnel removed the protesters from the room.
Ariel Schalit Pool Photo THIRTEEN MEMBERS of Israel’s parliament protested during Mike Pence’s speech, some holding signs reading, “Jerusalem is the capital of Palestine.” Security personnel removed the protesters from the room.

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