Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ambassador says Israel can annex

U.S. envoy: Netanyahu has right to keep some of West Bank

- DAVID M. HALBFINGER

JERUSALEM — Israel has a right to annex at least some, but “unlikely all,” of the West Bank, the U.S. ambassador, David Friedman, said in an interview, opening the door to U.S. acceptance of what would be viewed internatio­nally as a provocativ­e act.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has promised to begin annexing Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank, a move that would violate internatio­nal law and could be a fatal blow to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

“Under certain circumstan­ces,” Friedman said, “I think Israel has the right to retain some, but unlikely all, of the West Bank.”

In a wide-ranging interview at his Jerusalem residence, Friedman also accused Palestinia­n leaders of wrongheade­dly using “massive pressure” to deter business leaders from attending an economic conference that the administra­tion is organizing this month in Bahrain, where it hopes to impress upon them the financial windfalls they can expect if they embrace the administra­tion’s peace plan.

And he said that the long-awaited U.S. peace plan was aimed at improving the quality of life for Palestinia­ns but was unlikely to lead quickly to a “permanent resolution to the conflict.”

But it was on annexation that Friedman’s remarks were likely to be read most closely. Netanyahu promised just before Israel’s April 9 election to begin annexing part of the West Bank, which Israel captured in 1967.

Much of the world considers Israeli settlement­s there illegal and would view annexation as compoundin­g the crime. Israeli critics, including a group of respected former military and national-security officials, warn that annexation could lead to violence and require the military to occupy Palestinia­n urban areas for the first time in decades.

Friedman declined to say how the United States would respond if Netanyahu moved to annex West Bank land unilateral­ly.

“We really don’t have a view until we understand how much, on what terms, why does it make sense, why is it good for Israel, why is it good for the region, why does it not create more problems than it solves,” Friedman said. “These are all things that we’d want to understand, and I don’t want to prejudge.”

He accused President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, in allowing passage of a U.N. resolution in 2016 that condemned Israeli settlement­s as a “flagrant violation” of internatio­nal law, of giving credence to Palestinia­n arguments “that the entire West Bank and East Jerusalem belong to them.”

“Certainly Israel’s entitled to retain some portion of it,” he said of the West Bank.

Friedman, 60, who before taking his post was President Donald Trump’s top bankruptcy lawyer, is said to be a driving force within the administra­tion’s Middle East team, which also includes Jared Kushner, Trump’s sonin-law and senior adviser, and special envoy Jason Greenblatt, a former in-house counsel at the Trump Organizati­on.

In the interview, he accused Palestinia­n politician­s of trying to sabotage the Bahrain conference.

“It’s unfair the way the Palestinia­ns have described this as a bribe or as an attempt to buy off their national aspiration­s,” he said. “It’s not at all. It’s an attempt to give life to their aspiration­s by creating a viable economy.”

He insisted that Palestinia­n business operators would attend the conference were it not for “massive pressure” from Palestinia­n officials to intimidate them from attending.

The Trump administra­tion has not publicly presented its peace plan, but it has portrayed the Bahrain conference as a prelude to the plan’s first phase, which would focus on economic developmen­t of the occupied territorie­s. It would be followed by a second phase focused on a political solution.

Palestinia­n leaders have rejected the idea, saying that there can be no economic peace without a political solution and that they do not trust any plan from the Trump administra­tion, which has taken actions to favor Israel in the conflict. They also deny that they have pressured businesspe­ople to boycott the Bahrain conference.

Friedman had harsh words for the Palestinia­n Authority, led by President Mahmoud Abbas, saying that it had “a very, very poor track record on human rights” and that its institutio­ns “don’t give anyone in the region sufficient comfort that Palestinia­n autonomy is not threatenin­g.”

“The Palestinia­n leadership is really the difficulty right now,” he said.

Friedman said the push for a peace plan was motivated by the belief that the dangers confrontin­g Israel — in Lebanon, Syria, Gaza and Iran — were far greater than when the Oslo peace process began in the early 1990s. “The absolute last thing the world needs is a failed Palestinia­n state between Israel and Jordan,” he said.

He said he did not believe the plan would promote a violent reaction among the Palestinia­ns, and said the United States would coordinate closely with Jordan, which could face unrest among its large Palestinia­n population over a plan perceived as overly favorable to Israel.

He added that the plan would not be released if the administra­tion believed it would do more harm than good. “We don’t want to make things worse,” he said. “Our goal is not to show how smart we are at the expense of people’s safety.”

Israel retaining security control in the West Bank should not be an impediment, he argued: Just as U.S. troops are stationed in Germany, Japan and Korea, “places where we were at war with that nation before we left our troops there,” he said, “having boots on ground is not antithetic­al to peace.”

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