Kushner tight-lipped on Trump Middle East peace plan

Senior U.S. adviser acknowledges it might not be “smart money bet” to gamble on success of White House’s long-awaited blueprint for Middle East peace but insists it is a very detailed, fresh approach that hopefully will stimulate discussion and lead to breakthroughs in resolving decades-old conflict.

ISRAEL HAYOM

Kushner tight-lipped on Trump Middle East peace plan

U.S. President Donald Trump’s senior adviser and son-in-law acknowledged Thursday that it might not be a “smart money bet” to gamble on the success of the White House’s long-awaited blueprint for Middle East peace. But he insisted that it is a very detailed, fresh approach that hopefully will stimulate discussion and lead to breakthroughs in resolving the decades-old conflict.

Jared Kushner remained tight-lipped about the guts of the plan. He described it as an “in-depth operational document” not anchored to previous, failed negotiations, high-level political concepts or stale arguments.

“We’re building a very good business plan with a strong economic component for how Palestinians can move forward economically,” he said at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

It was the latest in a series of recent public appearances Kushner has made to lay the groundwork for rolling out the plan, which has been two years in the making. In recent weeks, Kushner also has made appearances at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, a secretive Republican gathering in Sea Island, Georgia, and at the Times 100 Summit in New York City.

Kushner is trying to persuade academics, lawmakers, former Middle East negotiators, regional players, special interest groups and potential spoilers to have an open mind and seriously consider the plan when it’s released, which won’t be before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan ends the first week of June, and perhaps not even then.

He said the plan attempts to ensure security for Israel and provide economic opportunity to improve the lives of Palestinians. The U.S. hopes that Arab countries will help bankroll economic incentives, such as infrastructure and industrial projects, to get Palestinians to buy into the plan.

The effort by Kushner and U.S. Special Envoy for International Negotiations Jason Greenblatt has been conducted without participation from the Palestinians. The Palestinian Authority, which has complained that White House favors Israel, severed ties with the Trump administration following several actions targeting them.

Trump closed the Palestinian diplomatic mission in Washington, saying the Palestinians refused to engage in peace talks with Israel. The U.S. stopped funding the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, slashing hundreds of millions of dollars in aid for projects in the West Bank and Gaza and cutting funding to hospitals in east Jerusalem that serve Palestinians. Trump also recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and moved the U.S. Embassy there from Tel Aviv.

The Palestinians seek the right of return for Palestinian refugees and the recognition of east Jerusalem as the capital of an independent Palestine. Middle East experts have questioned whether the Palestinians will exchange some or all of their demands for the prospect of economic prosperity.

In an interview last month with The Associated Press, Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shtayyeh likened that to “financial blackmail, which we reject.”

“We spoke to a lot of Palestinian people,” Kushner said. “We spoke to Palestinian business leaders. We said ‘What is it that you’re looking for?’

“We tried to figure out how to design something that we think can be very acceptable to them and the question will be whether the leadership has the courage to try to jump in…. It’s been very disheartening for us that the Palestinian leadership has been attacking a plan” when they “don’t even know what it is.”

May 3, 2019 | 3 Comments »

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  1. The Hundred Years War is far from over. It will most likely become a Two Hundred Years War. It will continue as long as someone can be found who is willing to fund terrorist attacks and anti-Israel, antsemitic propaganda. And it is hard to imagine a situation in which no one will be willing to fund them. Certainly it has plenty of funders now.

  2. U.S. Peace Plan: The Palestinian Leadership Has Very Little Leverage – Zev Chafets

    The U.S. peace plan is not just another diplomatic effort at “peace processing.” It is a recognition that the Hundred Years War between the Jews and Arabs is over. The Palestinian leadership has very little leverage. A refusal to engage will be an invitation to the U.S. and Israel to unilaterally establish a new order in the West Bank. Some Palestinian leaders hope to do nothing and outwait Trump. But this administration has at least two years, and perhaps six, to establish irreversible facts.

    In the recent Knesset elections, political parties favoring a two-state solution got barely 15 percent of the vote. Netanyahu’s new government will have more than enough support for unilateral, American-backed moves, and very little trouble with its parliamentary opposition.

    The Palestinians can’t expect help from their fellow Arabs. This was recently demonstrated by the faint response of the Arab League (and the Arab street) to the establishment of the U.S. embassy in Jerusalem — long supposed to be the third rail of Arab political sensitivity. The two most important Arab countries, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, will certainly proclaim their opposition to the Trump Plan. They will even more certainly do nothing weaken their ties to the U.S.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-04-30/palestinians-won-t-like-trump-s-deal-of-the-century

  3. Never feed your enemy and that offshore gas is in Israel’s hands so nothing will satisfy the Pals except to capture it all and live like Saudi princes.