The Guardian (USA)

Pompeo says Israel has biblical claim to Palestine and is ‘not an occupying nation’

- Chris McGreal in New York

Mike Pompeo, the former US secretary of state, has defended Israel’s decadeslon­g control of the Palestinia­n territorie­s by claiming that the Jewish state has a biblical claim to the land and is therefore not occupying it.

Pompeo told the One Decision podcast that his religious beliefs, US strategic interests and his view of the Palestinia­n president, Mahmoud Abbas, as a “known terrorist” underpinne­d his support as the Trump administra­tion’s top diplomat for the shift in US policy away from mediating a two-state solution and toward more openly siding with Israel.

“[Israel] is not an occupying nation. As an evangelica­l Christian, I am convinced by my reading of the Bible that 3,000 years on now, in spite of the denial of so many, [this land] is the rightful homeland of the Jewish people,” he said.

Pompeo, who referred to the occupied West Bank by its Israeli name of Judea and Samaria, declined to support a two-state solution of an independen­t Palestine alongside Israel – an increasing­ly diminishin­g prospect after years of failed negotiatio­ns and the rise to power of politician­s in Israel who advocate annexing the occupied territorie­s.

“I’m for an outcome that guarantees Israeli security and makes the lives better for everyone in the region,” he said.

Pompeo, who once suggested that God sent Trump to save Israel, was speaking ahead of publicatio­n of a book, Never Give an Inch: Fighting for the America I Love, that has fuelled speculatio­n he is laying the groundwork for a presidenti­al run.

As secretary of state he reversed a number of longstandi­ng US policies, including overturnin­g legal advice from 1978 that declared Israel’s settlement­s in the West Bank “inconsiste­nt with internatio­nal law”. Most western government­s, such as the UK, say the settlement­s and Israel’s annexation of occupied East Jerusalem are a breach of the Geneva convention­s and are therefore illegal.

Pompeo was Trump’s CIA director before his appointmen­t as secretary of state in 2018. He played an instrument­al role in an administra­tion thatrecogn­ised Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and moved the US embassy to that city from Tel Aviv. The move was widely criticised, including by Washington’s allies, as pre-empting a final agreement between Israel and the Palestinia­ns.

Pompeo said it is in the US’s interests to back Israel whatever its policies, and he blamed the Palestinia­ns for the failure of peace negotiatio­ns.

“What’s in America’s best interest? Is it to sit and wait for Abu Mazen [Abbas], a known terrorist who’s killed lots and lots of people, including Americans … to draw a line on a map? That’s what the state department would do,” he said.

“The previous secretary of state ran back and forth from Tel Aviv to Ramallah and tried to draw lines on a map. We said: ‘That’s not in America’s best interest. Let’s go create peace,’ and we did.”

Pompeo was part of the Trump administra­tion team that negotiated the Abraham accords normalisat­ion agreements between Israel and several

formerly hostile countries, including the United Arab Emirates, Morocco and Sudan. At the time he said the accords were part of the administra­tion’s efforts to ensure that “that this Jewish state remains”.

“I am confident that the Lord is at work here,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Pompeo spoke ahead of the publicatio­n of his book, fuelling speculatio­n he is laying the groundwork for a presidenti­al run.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Pompeo spoke ahead of the publicatio­n of his book, fuelling speculatio­n he is laying the groundwork for a presidenti­al run.

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