What to expect from Trump’s visit to Israel, Palestinian territories
OCCUPIED AL-QUDS: US President Donald Trump’s visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories on Monday and Tuesday will be closely scrutinised as he seeks ways to restart peace efforts. Here are key issues:
Nearly 70 years after the creation of Israel, peace with the Palestinians remains a long way off. This year marks 50 years since the Six-Day War and the beginning of Israel’s occupation. Peace efforts have been at a standstill since a US-led initiative collapsed in 2014. Meanwhile, Israel and Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas, which runs the Gaza Strip, have fought three wars since 2008.
Trump has talked up his business experience in saying he wants to reach the "ultimate deal": Israeli-Palestinian peace. However, a detailed plan is not expected only four months after taking office. Trump is instead expected to seek ways to move the two sides closer together and build confidence, though there is widespread scepticism.
"Triggering the start of a process does not mean taking it until the end," said Palestinian political scientist Ali al-Jarbawi.
Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have not had substantive direct talks since 2010. Abbas says he is ready to meet Netanyahu under Trump’s peace efforts, and there has been speculation the US president could seek to arrange a meeting while in the region. Many analysts see the prospect as unlikely.
Trump sparked concern when he backed away from the long US commitment to a two-state solution to the conflict, saying he could support one state if it meant peace. An independent Palestinian state alongside Israel remains the focus of international peace efforts. National Security Adviser HR McMaster said Trump will "express his desire for dignity and self-determination for the Palestinians".
Trump arrives after a visit to Saudi Arabia, seen as essential to any peace efforts. Trump’s White House has spoken of reviving the idea of a regional peace process, pulling in other Arab countries.
Analyst Ghaith al-Omari said the idea seemed to involve "key Arab States -- Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and other US allies -- into a regional process that would create, as Trump called it, a ‘bigger canvas’ for reaching peace."
Trump has been receptive to Israel’s position that Palestinian leaders must do more to stop incitement to violence, including by stopping payments to the families of those who have carried out attacks and were killed or are currently in jail. But what will his position be on Israeli settlement building?
Trump has called on Israel to hold back on settlement construction, but his ambassador to Israel David Friedman has said "we have no demand for a settlement freeze".
A firm demand would put Netanyahu under pressure from his right-wing base. Israeli right-wingers rejoiced in Trump’s election, believing it would allow them to move ahead with unrestrained settlement building and, for some, to move toward their goal of annexing most of the West Bank.
Trump vowed during his election campaign to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Occupied al-Quds and to recognise the disputed city as Israel’s capital. Such a move would break with decades of precedent. He has since backed away, saying the move was still being looked at, but there has also been speculation over whether he will make an announcement on the subject while visiting. Trump is expected to become the first sitting US president to visit the Western Wall, the holiest site where Jews can pray. It is located in east Occupied al-Quds, which Israel occupied in 1967 and later annexed in a move never recognised by the international community.
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