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Friday March 29, 2024

Netanyahu hopes to ‘make history’ at talks on Trump peace plan

By AFP
January 27, 2020

OCCUPIED-AL-QUDS: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu voiced hope Sunday that he can "make history" in Washington this week during talks on US President Donald Trump’s peace plan for the Middle East.

Netanyahu has been invited to meet Trump at the White House on Monday and Tuesday to discuss the project, which has already been dismissed by the Palestinians. "We are in the midst of very dramatic diplomatic developments, but the climax is still ahead of us," Netanyahu told reporters ahead of a weekly cabinet meeting.

"In a short while, I’ll leave for Washington to meet my friend, the President of the United States Donald Trump, who will present his deal of the century... I’m full of hope that we can make history," he added.

Trump on Thursday said he will release his long-delayed plan before meeting Netanyahu in Washington. "It’s a great plan. It’s a plan that really would work," Trump said. Netanyahu’s political rival Benny Gantz has also been invited to the White House to meet with Trump on Monday.

Gantz told a news conference in Tel Aviv on Saturday that the "peace plan devised by President Trump will go down in history as a meaningful landmark". He expected the initiative to allow "different players in the Middle East to finally move ahead towards an historic regional agreement".

The Palestinian leadership was not invited and has already rejected Trump’s plan amid tense relations with the US president over his recognition of occupied al-Quds as Israel’s undivided capital.

"This step only reaffirms our absolute rejection of what the US administration has done so far, particularly the recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital," Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas’s spokesman said in a statement.

The Palestinians see east occupied al-Quds as the capital of their future state and believe Trump’s plan buries the two-state solution that has been for decades the cornerstone of international Middle East diplomacy.

World powers have long agreed that occupied al-Quds’s fate should be settled through negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. Israel has occupied east occupied al-Quds and the West Bank since the 1967 Six-Day War.

More than 600,000 Israelis now live there in settlements considered illegal under international law. Trump’s peace initiative has been in the works since 2017. The economic component of the initiative was unveiled in June and calls for $50 billion in international investment in the Palestinian territories and neighbouring Arab countries over 10 years.