Trump to present Middle East plan to Israeli leaders on Monday
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[January 27, 2020]
By Steve Holland and Dan Williams
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump is expected to disclose details of his Middle East peace
plan to Israeli leaders on Monday as Palestinian officials decried it as
a bid "to finish off" the Palestinian cause.
Trump will meet separately with right-wing Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and centrist opposition leader Benny Gantz in
Washington over his long-delayed proposals, which have been kept secret.
Palestinians fear the plan will dash their hopes for an independent
state in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. Palestinian
leaders say they were not invited to Washington and that no peace plan
can work without them. Ahead of the U.S.-Israeli meetings, Palestinian
Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said Trump and Netanyahu were using the
plan as a distraction from their domestic troubles.
Trump was impeached in the House of Representatives last month and is on
trial in the Senate on abuse of power charges. Netanyahu faces
corruption charges and an national election on March 2, his third in
less than a year. Both men deny wrongdoing.
"This plan is to protect Trump against being impeached and to protect
Netanyahu from going to jail, and it is not a peace plan," Shtayyeh said
on Monday at a cabinet meeting in Ramallah in the Israeli-occupied West
Bank.
"We reject it, and we demand the international community not be a
partner to it because it contradicts the basics of international law and
inalienable Palestinian rights," he added.
"It is nothing but a plan to finish off the Palestinian cause."
WASHINGTON MEETINGS
Trump's initiative, whose principal author is his son-in-law Jared
Kushner, follows a long line of efforts to resolve one of the world's
most intractable problems.
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks collapsed in 2014. The United Nations
and most governments around the world back a blueprint for a two-state
solution - an independent Palestinian state living side-by-side with
Israel, the foundation of every peace plan for decades.
Trump hoped to release his own plan last year but was forced to delay as
Netanyahu twice tried unsuccessfully to form a governing coalition after
inconclusive elections.
After Monday's meetings with Netanyahu and Gantz, Trump will on Tuesday
deliver joint remarks with Netanyahu at the White House, where the
president may reveal details of his proposal.
But whether it truly will jumpstart the long-stalled effort to bring
Israelis and Palestinians together is far from certain.
Palestinians have refused to engage the Trump administration and
denounced its first stage - a $50-billion economic revival plan
announced last June.
The White House hope was that if Trump could get the support of both
Netanyahu and Gantz for the plan, it would help provide some momentum. A
U.S. official said Trump wants to know they are both on board with the
plan before announcing it.
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Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a speech at Bar-Ilan
University in Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv, Israel June 14, 2009.
REUTERS/Baz Ratner/File Photo
Gantz, Netanyahu's principal domestic political rival, last week
lifted his objection to having the plan published before Israel's
March election.
"I am looking forward to meeting the president - a president of
utmost friendliness to the State of Israel - on a matter that is
very important for the State of Israel - with national, strategic
and security ramifications," Gantz said as he landed in Washington
on Sunday.
But Trump, preoccupied with November's re-election bid, can ill
afford to wait months for Israel to decide its next prime minister,
a U.S. official said.
HONEST MEDIATOR?
Palestinians have called Trump's proposal dead in the water even
before its publication.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has said Washington can no
longer be regarded as an honest mediator, accusing it of pro-Israel
bias. This followed a series of Trump decisions that delighted
Israel but dismayed and infuriated Palestinians.
These included recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel,
moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and slashing
hundreds of millions of dollars in humanitarian aid to
the Palestinians.
Palestinian and Arab sources who were briefed on the draft fear it
seeks to bribe Palestinians into accepting Israeli occupation, in
what could be a prelude to Israel annexing about half of the West
Bank including most of the Jordan Valley, the strategic and fertile
easternmost strip of the territory.
Continuing obstacles to a peace settlement include the expansion of
Israeli settlements on occupied land and the rise to power in Gaza
of the Islamist movement Hamas, which is formally committed to
Israel's destruction.
The Trump administration in November reversed decades of U.S. policy
when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that Washington no
longer regarded Israeli settlements on West Bank land as
inconsistent with international law.
Palestinians and most of the international community view the
settlements as illegal. Israel disputes this.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Dan Williams; additional reporting
by Ali Sawafta in Ramallah and Stephen Farrell in Jerusalem, Editing
by Clarence Fernandez and Angus MacSwan)
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