The US President Donald Trump has made a decision regarding Israel and Jerusalem. Here are the details of the report.
President Donald Trump is considering recognizing Occupied Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, officials say, a highly charged declaration that risks inflaming tensions across the Middle East.
Trump’s announcement is expected next week and follows months of internal deliberations that grew particularly intense in recent days, officials familiar with the talks said Thursday.
They described the president as intent on fulfilling his pledge to move the US embassy but also mindful that doing so could set back his aim of forging a long-elusive peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians.
The officials, who weren’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity, said the outlines of Trump’s plan emerged from a meeting of his top national security advisers at the White House on Monday. Trump himself was expected to drop by the meeting for 15 or 20 minutes. He ended up staying for at least an hour and grew increasingly animated during the session, according to two officials briefed on what happened.
Trump is likely to issue a waiver on moving the embassy by Monday, officials said, though they cautioned that the president could always decide otherwise.
The White House also is considering a possible presidential speech or statement on Occupied Jerusalem by Wednesday, according to the officials and an outside administration adviser. Another possibility involves Vice President Mike Pence, who is set to travel to Israel in mid-December, making the announcement during his trip, one official said.
Pence said Tuesday that Trump is “actively considering when and how” to move the embassy.
The Trump administration insisted the president hasn’t made any decisions on the embassy.
White House spokesman Sarah Sanders on Wednesday called an earlier report saying Trump would order an embassy move as “premature.”
“No decision on this matter has been made yet,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said Thursday.
Moving the embassy could spark widespread protest across the Middle East and undermine an Arab-Israeli peace push led by president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.
Trump’s campaign season promises won him the support of powerful pro-Israel voices in the Republican Party.
But as president, he has faced equally forceful lobbying from close US allies such as King Abdullah II of Jordan, who have impressed on him the dangers in abandoning America’s carefully balanced position on the holy city.
Under US law signed by President Bill Clinton in 1995, the US must relocate its embassy from Tel Aviv to Occupied Jerusalem unless the president waives the requirement on national security grounds, something required every six months.
If the waiver isn’t signed and the embassy doesn’t move, the State Department would lose half its funding for its facilities and their security around the world.
All presidents since Clinton have issued the waiver, saying Occupied Jerusalem’s status is a matter for Israelis and Palestinians to negotiate.
Trump signed the waiver at the last deadline in June, but the White House made clear he still intended to move the embassy.
Trump’s approach appears to thread a fine needle, much like he did with the Iran nuclear deal.
After vowing to pull out, Trump on October decertified the agreement as no longer serving America’s national interests.
But he didn’t announce new sanctions or take any other step to immediately revoke the accord.
Now, as then, he faced significant resistance from his top national security advisers.
At Monday’s White House meeting, Defense Secretary James Mattis and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson made the case that moving the embassy in Israel would pose a grave danger to American diplomats and troops stationed in the Middle East and Muslim nations, the US officials said.
King Abdullah II, who met Pence and Tillerson this week in Washington, made the same argument, telling the vice president and others that any change to the embassy in the absence of an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal would create unrest and instability throughout the region and drive up anti-American sentiment, according to the officials.
After a lengthy back and forth at the White House meeting, Trump and his inner circle appeared to accept those concerns but insisted that the president had to demonstrate his stated commitment to move the embassy, the officials said.
The discussion then turned toward waiving the embassy move for another six months but combining it with recognition of Occupied Jerusalem as Israel’s eternal capital, which the Israelis have long sought.
Any change in US position is delicate.
The State Department recently advised American diplomatic posts in predominantly Muslim nations that an announcement about the embassy and Occupied Jerusalem’s status is possible next week and advised them to be vigilant about possible protests, officials said.
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