Los Angeles Times

Closing U.S. mission angers Palestinia­ns

Operations of the U.S. Consulate General in Jerusalem will fold into new embassy.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — The United States will fold the operations of the Consulate General in Jerusalem into the new American Embassy in Israel, Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo said Thursday, in effect shuttering its diplomatic representa­tion to the Palestinia­n Authority here.

The move comes weeks after the United States ordered the office in Washington that served as the Palestinia­ns’ de facto embassy there closed.

In a statement, Pompeo couched the change in administra­tive language, saying that “we plan to achieve significan­t efficienci­es and increase our effectiven­ess by merging U.S. Embassy Jerusalem and U.S. Consulate General Jerusalem into a single diplomatic mission.” Pompeo said U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman would oversee the merger.

The announceme­nt drew no comment from the Israeli government but a furious reaction from the Palestinia­n Authority.

Chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said that closing the U.S. Consulate “has nothing to do with “efficiency” and a lot to do with pleasing an ideologica­l U.S. team that is willing to disband the foundation­s of American foreign policy, and of the internatio­nal system, in order to reward Israeli violations and crimes.”

The Trump administra­tion, he said, is “working together with the Israeli government to impose greater Israel rather than the twostate solution on the 1967 border,” in effect accusing the United States of dismantlin­g the diplomatic structure in place since the Oslo accords of 1993 that aimed at achieving two states.

President Trump has declared Israeli-Palestinia­n peace negotiatio­ns a principal foreign policy goal, saying an agreement would be “the ultimate deal” and appointing his son-in-law and advisor, Jared Kushner, to manage the talks.

The announceme­nt caps a tumultuous year in U.S. diplomacy regarding Jerusalem, the contested city that Trump recognized as Israel’s capital in December.

In May, the American Embassy was officially relocated from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, provoking heated responses from the Palestinia­ns and sparking a protest on the border between Gaza and Israel in which 60 Palestinia­ns died.

The Palestinia­n Authority has refused all contact with the Trump administra­tion since then.

The action Thursday will result in the consular office that long served as a quasiembas­sy for Palestinia­n affairs being managed out of a new “Palestinia­n Affairs Unit” in the U.S. Embassy in Jeruslaem.

Pompeo said that the move does not signal a change of U.S. policy on Jerusalem, the West Bank or the Gaza Strip.

But it follows the U.S. in August slashing its humanitari­an aid budget to the Palestinia­ns by more than $200 million and canceling its contributi­on to a United Nations relief agency for Palestinia­n refugees, a sum that came to about $350 million per year.

Dan Shapiro, the former U.S. ambassador to Israel, said Thursday’s decision to merge the consulate with the embassy “downgrades diplomatic relations with the Palestinia­ns. It is not consistent with the goal of achieving a two-state solution, and that is how it will be understood by both sides.”

“It is very unlikely that the Palestinia­n Authority will engage the U.S. government through the Embassy to Israel,” he added.

Danny Ayalon, who served as the Israeli ambassador to the United States from 2002 to 2006, rejoiced in the decision, saying, “Israeli interests are well served,” and “the Palestinia­ns will come to understand there’s a price for their intransige­nce and double talk and support of terror, be it financial or through incitement.”

Calling the Palestinia­ns “spoiled children,” Ayalon, formerly a right-wing member of the Israeli parliament, said demoting the consulate was “a punishment to the Palestinia­ns,” explaining: “They refuse to speak to Trump’s people and call Ambassador Friedman ‘a son of a dog.’ The Palestinia­ns keep spitting at the Americans and want us to say it’s just rain.”

Alon Pinkas, a former Israeli consul general in New York, countered, “What is the point of dismantlin­g a direct diplomatic channel to the PA? It has both substantiv­e and symbolic value.”

“The U.S. has absolutely no coherent policy on the Israeli-Palestinia­n issue,” Pinkas said. This decision, while meaningles­s to Israel, will further convince the Palestinia­ns that the U.S. will not act as an intermedia­ry.”

Only Guatemala has followed the U.S. lead to move its embassy to Jerusalem. Other Western government­s condition such a move on a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, including a decision on the permanent status of Jerusalem.

The Palestinia­n government claims East Jerusalem as the capital of a future state. Israel declared Jerusalem as its capital at its founding in 1948 and has located its parliament, Supreme Court and other institutio­ns of state in West Jerusalem.

 ?? Thomas Coex AFP/Getty Images ?? BY SHUTTERING the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, Washington in effect is closing its diplomatic representa­tion to the Palestinia­n Authority in Israel.
Thomas Coex AFP/Getty Images BY SHUTTERING the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, Washington in effect is closing its diplomatic representa­tion to the Palestinia­n Authority in Israel.

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