USA TODAY International Edition

TRUMP'S EMBRACE OF ISRAELI POLICIES MAY EASE

Presidente­lect to take a hands- off approach to Israel and its treatment of Palestinia­ns

- Oren Dorell @ orendorell USA TODAY

In a break from long- standing U. S. policy, Donald Trump has embraced many of Israel’s positions in its dispute with the Palestinia­ns, but how far he will go is unclear.

Trump has said he would like to move the U. S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, a provocativ­e act to Palestinia­ns. His campaign’s top Israel advisers said Jewish settlement­s on land Palestinia­ns want for a future state — considered illegal by the Obama administra­tion — are not an obstacle to peace. And they say a President Trump would stop funding the United Nations Human Rights Council, which has singled out Israel for disproport­ionate condemnati­on.

The United States keeps an embassy in Tel Aviv because Israel annexed the eastern half of its capital, Jerusalem, after seizing it and other territorie­s during a war in 1967. Israel claims rights to Jerusalem dating back to biblical times, but Palestinia­ns want east Jerusalem as their own capital. Since the war, U. S. presidents have declined to move the embassy. U. S. policy also considers Israeli settlement­s in east Jerusalem and the West Bank illegal because it wants the status of the land decided by negotiatio­ns on the boundaries of a Palestinia­n state.

Trump, who gave an Israeli newspaper, Israel Hayom, his first foreign press interview after his election, told the paper Friday: “I love and respect Israel and its citizens.”

The president- elect called Israel the one true democracy and defender of human rights in the Middle East. He told The Wall Street Journal that he would like to negotiate peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns to end “the war that never ends.”

“That’s the ultimate deal,” Trump said.

Trump’s warmth toward Israel would be a change after eight years of President Obama, who knocked heads with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over settlement­s and the Iran nuclear deal, which Netanyahu vehemently opposed.

Trump appears ready to take a hands- off approach to Israel and its treatment of Palestinia­ns, which will contribute to a sense of desperatio­n, said Yousef Munayyer, executive director of the U. S. Campaign for Palestinia­n Rights.

“That’s very dangerous for the Palestinia­ns and creates incentives for violence that we haven’t seen for a very long time,” Munayyer said. “For Palestinia­ns living under occupation, this is the definition of no hope.”

Such violence has already occurred because of anger over Israel’s continued control of Palestinia­n territory. A wave of Palestinia­n attacks, mostly by knife, that began in September 2015 has resulted in the deaths of more than 40 Israelis and tourists, according to Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. More than 224 Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israeli fire, most of them said by Israel to be attackers, the Associated Press reported.

A U. S. policy shift that embraces Israeli positions on controvers­ial issues such as Jerusalem and settlement­s would risk putting the U. S. at odds with its European, Arab and Muslim allies in the global fight against terrorism, while boosting terrorist recruitmen­t by the Islamic State and other extremists, said Mia Bloom, a terrorism analyst at Georgia State University.

“This would be the spark to cause heavy Palestinia­n recruitmen­t,” Bloom said, referring to Trump’s statements about moving the capital to Jerusalem.

In September, Trump told Netanyahu that as president he would “recognize Jerusalem as the undivided capital of the state of Israel.” After the election, one of Trump’s advisers said such a move would have to wait.

“Many presidents of the United States have committed to do that, and ( Trump) said as well that he will do that, but he will do it under consensus,” Walid Phares, a foreign policy adviser to the president- elect, told the BBC on Thursday. Phares did not explain whose consensus would be needed.

Jason Greenblatt, co- chairman of the Trump campaign’s Israel Advisory Committee, said Trump doesn’t have a problem with Israeli constructi­on on territory that Palestinia­ns want for a future state.

 ?? KOBI GIDEON, GOVERNMENT PRESS OFFICE HANDOUT, EPA ?? Donald Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Trump Tower in New York, on Sept. 25.
KOBI GIDEON, GOVERNMENT PRESS OFFICE HANDOUT, EPA Donald Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at Trump Tower in New York, on Sept. 25.

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