Ramallah – Palestinians Welcome Kushner As Peace Envoy, Hope He’ll Be Balanced

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    FILE - Stephen Bannon, (R) Senior Advisor to U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and Jared Kushner (L) walk from Trump's plane upon their arrival in Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S., December 1, 2016.  REUTERS/Mike Segar Ramallah – Palestinian Authority officials cautiously welcomed news on Monday that Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s Jewish son-in-law, will serve as the president-elect’s Middle East peace envoy, expressing hope that he will maintain a fair balance regarding the ongoing conflict with Israel.

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    “We hope that Mr. Kushner will be the US peace envoy and will be able to do what all of his predecessors have tried to do, and will finally achieve peace between Israelis and Palestinians,” Husam Zomlot, PA President Mahmoud Abbas’s adviser for strategic affairs, told The Jerusalem Post. “This is a position that requires a firm commitment to the US’s long held policies.”

    Zomlot said it was encouraging that Trump announced the appointment even before taking office, a possible indication that he was committed to working on a peace deal between the sides.

    “It’s a good sign that President-elect Trump early on appointed one of his closest people to him, his son-in-law, to take this task,” Zomlot added. “We don’t just see the glass half-empty, but also half-full. We see the commitment by President-elect Trump to intervene as early as possible and spend political capital to resolve this issue.”

    In an interview with Britain’s Times of London and Germany’s Bild, Trump said that Kushner, Ivanka Trump’s husband, would take on the task of negotiating peace between Israelis and Palestinians – an appointment Trump had previously floated due to the fact that Kushner knowledge of the region and players.

    “Ya know what, Jared is such a good kid and he’ll make a deal with Israel that no one else can,” Trump said of Kushner. “He’s a natural, he’s a great deal, he’s a natural— ya know what I was talking about, natural — he’s a natural deal-maker — everyone likes him.” The president-elect, who will be inaugurated as America’s 45th president on Friday, has repeatedly discussed his interest in securing a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians – an agreement he has referred to as the greatest deal of them all.

    Kushner has no previous diplomatic experience, but steered Trump’s foreign policy throughout his presidential campaign and subsequent presidential transition. He was the primary drafter of Trump’s speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which drew positive feedback from the crowd.

    “What we know: he’s a really tough, smart guy, and we hope he will bring new energy to our region,” Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman said of Kushner last month.

    As a member of the president’s family, Kushner had to retain a law firm to navigate him through potential legal obstacles to working for his father-in-law – specifically, a federal anti-nepotism law which states that “a public official may not appoint, employ, promote, advance or advocate for appointment, employment, promotion or advancement, in or to a civilian position in the agency in which he is serving or over which he exercises jurisdiction or control any individual who is a relative of the public official.”

    But his legal counsel, WilmerHale, concluded last month that precedent was laid for Kushner by Trump’s former rival, Hillary Rodham Clinton, who won a court case in the 1990s in her fight to chair a national task force on health care reform for her husband, then-president Bill Clinton. That case found that existing law bans appointments to agencies and departments, but not within the White House itself.

    Kushner and wife Ivanka Trump, who converted upon their marriage in 2009, are Orthodox Jews. They are in the process of moving to Washington’s Kalorama neighborhood, where they will be neighbors with the Clintons, the Obamas and several of the world’s ambassadors to the US.

    “He clearly is someone who has a sense of Jewish identity, and he is someone who has a genuine attachment to Israel and understanding of the importance of the US-Israel relationship,” Dennis Ross, a senior Middle East diplomat and veteran of the George H. W. Bush, Clinton and Obama administrations, told the Post. “People I know who know him describe him as smart, as someone who will clearly learn what he needs to learn and will approach things thoughtfully, carefully, even analytically. So those would all be descriptors that I would hope would be accurate and emblematic of how he’ll approach his responsibilities helping the new president.”

    Trump declined to comment in the interview on whether he would move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, despite aides of his insisting it is a top priority for the incoming president. He did, however, reiterate his disappointment with the outgoing administration’s decision to abstain from a vote at the UN Security Council last month condemning Israel for its settlement enterprise.

    “The Palestinians are given so much — even though it’s not legally binding it’s psychologically binding and it makes it much tougher for me to negotiate,” Trump said. “You understand that? Because people are giving away chips, they’re giving away all these chips.”


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    4 Comments
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    ChachoMoe
    ChachoMoe
    7 years ago

    Whilst it has never ended good with a Jew in any top positions, the very fact that he is Trump’s family is a major factor in the Arab world, when it comes to negotiating. I can’t recall which Prime Minister used that tactic, he sent his son to negotiate.

    allmark
    allmark
    7 years ago

    Interesting that his law firm says he is exempt from the nepotism ban because he will work in the White House since the very reason for the ban was the appointment of Bobby Kennedy as Attorney General by his brother President Kennedy!

    Meloah
    Meloah
    7 years ago

    The Torah says that those people are going to be a thorn in our eyes. As such I don’t expect a real peaceful agreement to be reached. What Kushner could try to show the world how Israel is willing to make peace and the Palestinians are not. But ultimately, the United Nations don’t care at all about Israel, only about that Israel should be weakened. The UN is waiting for a change to impose sanctions on Israel, as they just wanted now in France, but got postponed for a more opportunistic time…we are getting closer and closer…

    7 years ago

    First brainy thing to employ a jewish envoy for peace so the Israelies wont shout him down at any inconvenience as an antisemite. Have a feeling he wont want to boil bad blood by moving the embassy to Jerusalem and be on the compromising end on many more sensitive issues. He is a well thought out man and will think of reprecussions of acrions as opposed to Bibi and his cohorts where a life is not worth in change.