Middle East

Trump adviser Kushner says he’s ‘ready to work’ with Abbas: Report

Jared Kushner, US President Donald Trump's senior adviser, said that he is "ready to work with President Abbas," a Palestinian newspaper reported on Sunday.

Kushner, who is married to Trump's daughter Ivanka, spoke in an interview with the newspaper Al Quds. The interview was headlined, "I am ready to work with President Abbas, if he wishes." He was referring to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

In the interview, which was published in Arabic, Kushner sent a direct message to the Palestinian people: “You deserve to have a bright future, now is the time for both the Israelis and Palestinians to strengthen their leaderships and re-focus them to encourage them to open up towards a solution, and not fear trying,” the newspaper reported.

Washington has said it has a peace plan in the works that could be released soon. Israeli-Palestinian negotiations stalled in 2014.

Abbas and the Palestinian leadership have refused to meet with Trump's team following his decision in December to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and to move the US Embassy there. The Palestinians want their own future state with a capital in East Jerusalem.

Jared Kushner was negotiating peace in the Middle East this week. Even though he has a $5 million to $25 million credit line with an Israeli bank.https://t.co/HNfALd10Y6

— Citizens for Ethics (@CREWcrew) June 23, 2018

Kushner, who has taken the lead on Trump's plan to forge a Middle East peace deal and who represented Trump at the opening of the embassy in Jerusalem in May, said he did not "wish to talk about the details of the deal that were working on." But he said it would be ready "soon."

Saeb Erekat, a veteran negotiator, told MEE recently that he had yet to see an official draft of the so-called deal.

He added the Americans had become "nothing else than spokespeople for the Israeli occupation" whose intention was to "normalise Israeli apartheid".

Copy of deal

MEE reported in March that Saudi officials had delivered a copy of the deal to Abbas and he had refused to open the document.

"If there's any plan, this is being implemented on the ground: with moving the US embassy to occupied Jerusalem, withdrawing support for the two-state solution, cutting funds to UNRWA and, eventually, trying to normalise the Israeli apartheid in Palestine," Erekat told MEE.

The newspaper cited Kushner as saying: "If President Abbas is ready to go back to the negotiations table, then we are ready to participate in the discussion, but if its not the case, then we are going to make the plan public."

He added: "I believe that in order to reach an agreement, both parts are going to gain more than theyre giving, and both sides will feel confident that the life of their people will be better decades from today because of the concessions that theyre offering."

An important meeting today with senior advisor to the president Jared Kushner, special representative for international negotiations Jason Greenblatt, and US ambassador to Israel David Friedman. Thank you, President Trump, for supporting Israel! pic.twitter.com/BPbAZSdEFj

— Benjamin Netanyahu (@netanyahu) June 22, 2018

The article was published after the White House confirmed that Kushner and Jason Greenblatt, who Trump has named as a special representative for international negotiations, met on Saturday evening in Jerusalem with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and US Ambassador David Friedman "to continue their discussions that began on Friday."

Kushner and Greenblatts trip to Jerusalem followed a regional tour that included Jordan and Egypt – Israels neighbours and peace partners – and Qatar, a Gulf state that has helped fund humanitarian aid to Gaza. They also held talks in Saudi Arabia, which does not recognize Israel but shares its enmity toward Iran.

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Chief Palestinian negotiator says US peace plan will 'normalise Israeli apartheid'

Asked by the newspaper what Arab leaders had told him, Kushner said the leaders "clarified that they want to see a Palestinian State with East Jerusalem as its capital. They want an agreement that enables the Palestinian people to live in peace, and to have the same economical opportunities that their people enjoy."

He added: "They want to see a deal that respects the dignity of the Palestinians, and puts an actual solution to the issues that have been discussed for decades. They all insist that al-Aqsa Mosque should continue to be open to all Muslims who wish to pray."

Kushner emphasised the economic benefits of a deal, saying that he believed "we can attract large investments in the infrastructure from both the private and the public sectors" to improve the Palestinian economy.

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