The Oklahoman

Pence: US embassy to Jerusalem by 2019’s end

- BY KEN THOMAS AND ARON HELLER

Vice President Mike Pence told Israel’s parliament on Monday that the U.S. embassy will move to Jerusalem by the end of 2019, receiving a rousing ovation as he pledged to barrel ahead with a plan that has set off weeks of unrest and thrown U.S. peace efforts into disarray.

The plan to accelerate the move of the embassy, announced in the first address of a sitting American vice president to the Knesset, marked the highlight of Pence’s three-day visit to Israel celebratin­g President Donald Trump’s decision last month to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“The United States has chosen fact over fiction — and fact is the only true foundation for a just and lasting peace,” Pence said.

“Jerusalem is Israel’s capital and as such President Trump has directed the State Department to immediatel­y begin preparatio­ns to move the United States embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem,” he said.

Pence’s speech drew an angry denunciati­on from the Palestinia­ns, with chief negotiator Saeb Erekat saying it “has proven that the U.S. administra­tion is part of the problem rather than the solution.”

Yet Pence, in an interview with The Associated Press after the speech, said he remained hopeful that the Palestinia­ns would re-enter negotiatio­ns. “Our message to President (Mahmoud) Abbas and the Palestinia­n Authority is the door’s open. The door’s open. President Trump is absolutely committed to doing everything the United States can to achieve a peace agreement that brings an end to decades of conflict.”

The embassy is to be opened in an existing U.S. facility that will be “retrofitte­d” to meet safety and security requiremen­ts, Undersecre­tary of State Steve Goldstein told reporters in Washington. He said Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had yet to sign off on the safety plan for the new facility but would do so in coming weeks.

The most likely location is in Jerusalem’s Arnona neighborho­od in a modern building that currently handles U.S. consular affairs like issuing passports, birth certificat­es and travel visas, said a U.S. official, who wasn’t authorized to discuss it publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The U.S. consul-general works out of another Jerusalem facility that handles political affairs and diplomatic functions.

The retrofitte­d building had been originally envisioned as an interim plan that would allow Trump to quickly fulfill his vow to move the embassy.

Yet it was unclear after Pence’s speech whether Trump still intended to break ground later on a new embassy elsewhere in Jerusalem or to use the retrofitte­d one permanentl­y.

“We expect that to be the embassy,” Goldstein said of the facility that will open next year. “We do not have a plan at current to build a new embassy.”

Pence was preceded on the Knesset dais by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who lavished his guest with praise and gratitude. It was part of an exceptiona­lly warm welcome for Pence in Israel, which has been overjoyed by Trump’s pivot on Jerusalem. But the move has infuriated the Palestinia­ns and upset America’s Arab allies as well.

A group of Arab lawmakers voiced their displeasur­e by raising banners saying “Jerusalem is the capital of Palestine” and heckling Pence at the beginning of his address. They were forcibly removed from the plenum.

The main Arab party in the Israeli parliament warned that it would boycott Pence. Its leader, Ayman Odeh, vowed they would not provide a “silent backdrop” to a man he called a “dangerous racist.”

 ?? [ARIEL SCHALIT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? U.S. Vice President Mike Pence walks with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday in Jerusalem.
[ARIEL SCHALIT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] U.S. Vice President Mike Pence walks with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday in Jerusalem.

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