The
U.S. asked Israel to refrain from any actions in the occupied West Bank
and Jerusalem that could create tensions ahead of President Biden’s
visit next month, four Israeli, U.S. and Palestinian officials told
Axios.
Why it matters: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is frustrated over recent contentious Israeli moves in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem and furious about the U.S. policy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
- Abbas has threatened
to take retaliatory action against Israel like stopping security
coordination, taking steps in the UN or even canceling the recognition
of Israel if the situation doesn't change.
Driving the news:
Barbara Leaf, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for near east
affairs, and her deputy for Israeli-Palestinian affairs, Hady Amr,
shuttled more than three times between Jerusalem and Ramallah during
their visit this week, officials said.
- Abbas told the U.S.
diplomat he wants Israel to stop all its unilateral actions and expects
Israel and the U.S. to present some kind of a political horizon for the
Palestinians, PLO official and Abbas adviser Hussein al-Sheikh told me.
- "The
U.S. wants the visit to take place in a good atmosphere – different
than the one now," said al-Sheikh, who is in charge of Palestinian
contact with the Biden administration and met Leaf three times during
her visit. "If the Israelis don’t stop their unilateral action the
situation deteriorates and becomes much worse."
Israeli officials said Leaf raised the Palestinian demands
with Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, Israeli Defense Minister
Benny Gantz, Israeli national security adviser Eyal Hulata and other
senior officials.
- Leaf asked Israel to halt actions like home
demolitions, evictions of Palestinians and decisions on settlement
building, as well as decrease Israeli military operations in the West
Bank until after Biden's visit, the officials said.
- Gantz,
Lapid and Hulata told Leaf they will do their best, but explained the
domestic political complexities of halting such actions in addition to
what they called the operational needs of the Israeli military in order
to stop attacks, the officials added.
- "The Biden administration
doesn’t want us to create any crisis in the West Bank.... They want
quiet and calm" for Biden's visit, a senior Israeli official told me.
State of play:
Israeli, Palestinian and U.S. officials said Leaf, Amr and U.S.
ambassador to Israel Tom Nides tried to put together a package of
tangible deliverables for the Palestinians ahead of Biden’s visit,
scheduled for July 13-15.
- But they didn't make significant
progress on the package because there are not enough meaningful things
the U.S. can give and Israel isn’t willing to take any steps with
political significance that will be enough for the Palestinians, the
officials said.
- “We need a political horizon. We want to hear
President Biden say what his detailed position regarding the two state
solution is," al-Sheikh said.
- The U.S. also asked Israel to
allow symbolic presence of Palestinian Authority officials at the
Allenby border crossing between the West Bank and Jordan. Israeli
officials say they are considering this positively.
What they're saying:
A State Department spokesperson said Leaf discussed "how to lay the
groundwork" for Biden's visit and continue the U.S.' "long-standing
diplomacy with both Israelis and Palestinians to encourage constructive
steps to improve the situation on the ground."