The decision of Israel to move its capital to Jerusalem may have been dashed following his Trump's latest decision.
President Donald Trump
President Donald Trump has signed the waiver keeping the U.S.
embassy in Tel Aviv and avoiding a controversial move to Jerusalem for
now.
The move, which the White House said was made in an effort to spur
peace talks between Israeli and Palestinian officials, was expected but
breaks with a promise Trump made during the 2016 campaign.
“President Trump made this decision to maximise the chances of
successfully negotiating a deal between Israel and the Palestinians,
fulfilling his solemn obligation to defend America’s national security
interests,” the White House statement said. “But, as he has repeatedly stated his intention to move the embassy, the question is not if that move happens, but only when.”
One senior administration official told CNN: “As you have seen
the President say, in the region and here in Washington, he thinks this
is a hopeful moment for peace and he has committed his administration to
try to facilitate progress towards peace and for that reason, he signed
the waiver.”
Trump promised throughout the 2016 campaign that he would move the
U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, an action the Israeli
government has long advocated.
“We will move the American embassy to the eternal capital of the Jewish people, Jerusalem,” he said in a March 2016 speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
But after Trump entered the White House, he and his aides began to
realise the fragile situation that surrounds any possible peace talks in
the Middle East.
Trump, after visiting both Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the Middle East
last month, he believes peace between the two could be at hand.
A senior administration official told CNN Thursday that the embassy will move when conditions are right.
“It is not a permanent thing,” the official added. “For him, it is a matter of when not if the U.S. embassy is moved to Jerusalem.”
The official added that this decision was made to “keep the peace process going.”
Signing the waiver this week forestalls any move for another six
months. Every U.S. president has signed such a waiver twice a year after
a law was passed in 1995 mandating the relocation of the embassy to
Jerusalem.
One official said that “all parties” — meaning both Israeli and Palestinian leaders — have been notified that the embassy would be staying in Tel Aviv.
The official also defended the fact that Trump not moving the embassy was breaking a key campaign promise.
“The campaign promise is that the United States is going to take
this action and that it is a question of when and not if,” the official
said.
-CNN
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