US envoy says it is unclear whether the political component of the peace plan will be unveiled before or after Israeli elections.
US President Donald Trump has not yet decided whether to unveil his Middle East peace plan before or after Israeli elections set for next month, US special envoy Jason Greenblatt told Bloomberg Television in an interview on Monday.
Greenblatt also said that the US hopes eventually to engage with the Palestinian Authority on an accord, even though it has been boycotting the Trump administration ever since he recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
Greenblatt, who along with Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner has been drafting a Middle East peace proposal for the last two years, said the US isn’t looking for regime change with the PA. At the same time, he signaled the US would continue to avoid any dealings with Hamas, the terrorist group that rules the Gaza Strip.
“We are not looking for a regime change, President [Mahmoud] Abbas is the leader of the Palestinians, so we hope that he will be able to come to the table,” he told Bloomberg Television.
“We do hope to have continued engagement or an eventual re-engagement with the Palestinian Authority.”
Greenblatt gave no indication of what the political plan would look like, but said Trump would have to “decide soon” whether to roll it out before the Israeli elections on September 17 or after — and whether to wait until after a new government has been formed.
“This conflict will only be resolved by direct negotiations between the parties,” Greenblatt stressed. “It’s not for the United States or the European Union or the United Nations to demand how this conflict can be resolved.”
The peace initiative, partially unveiled at a Bahrain conference in June, dangled the prospect of pumping $50 billion-worth of investment into the Palestinian Authority economy.
Little is known about the political component of the peace plan, but Kushner indicated in April that the plan would not focus on the two-state solution.
In so much as Israel has no true peace partner, (nor have they ever had), with whom they can negotiate a settlement, all that remains is a unilaterally imposed solution. This is the “Deal of the Century”, and will very likely be the last chance for a settlement that provides for Israel’s security, and that does not guarantee Israel’s ultimate destruction. It will be as fair as it can be for the Palestinians, who remain violently opposed to Israel’s very existence. For this to succeed, Trump would be well advised not to release “The Deal” until the Israeli elections are over, and, if he is smart, not until his own re-election is secured.