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Home News

Israel lauds US decision to close PLO mission ‎in Washington

by  News Agencies , Gideon Allon , Daniel Siryoti , Ariel Kahana , Yoni Hersch and ILH Staff
Published on  09-12-2018 00:00
Last modified: 02-23-2021 13:54
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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday praised ‎the Trump administration for its decision to close down ‎the Palestine Liberation Organization's mission in ‎Washington, saying it was "the correct decision."‎

President Donald Trump's move to close the PLO's embassy in Washington has been described as the ‎‎latest U.S. blow against the Palestinians over their ‎refusal to resume peace talks with Israel. ‎

The Israeli-Palestinian peace process has been ‎frozen since 2014.‎

Relations between Washington and Ramallah have been ‎particularly strained since Trump announced last December that he was recognizing ‎Jerusalem as Israel's capital and would move the U.S. ‎Embassy there, which was done in May. ‎

The moves infuriated the Palestinians, and Palestinian ‎Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has since refused ‎to engage with any of Trump's Middle East envoys, saying the U.S. bias toward Israel proves ‎it cannot act as an impartial mediator in ‎regional peace talks. ‎

The State Department confirmed the decision to shutter the PLO mission.‎

‎"We have permitted the PLO office to conduct ‎‎operations that support the objective of achieving a ‎‎lasting, comprehensive peace between Israelis and ‎‎the Palestinians since the expiration of a previous ‎‎waiver in November 2017," said State Department ‎‎spokeswoman Heather Nauert.‎

‎"However, the PLO has not taken steps to advance the ‎‎start of direct and meaningful negotiations with ‎‎Israel. To the contrary: PLO leadership has ‎‎condemned a U.S. peace plan they have not yet seen and ‎‎refused to engage with the U.S. government with ‎‎respect to peace efforts and otherwise.

"As such, and ‎‎reflecting congressional concerns, the ‎‎administration has decided that the PLO office in ‎‎Washington will close at this point.‎

‎"The United States continues to believe ‎that direct ‎negotiations between the two parties are ‎the only ‎way forward. … This action should not be ‎exploited by ‎those who seek to act as spoilers to ‎distract from ‎the imperative of reaching a peace ‎agreement. We are ‎not retreating from our efforts to ‎achieve a lasting ‎and comprehensive peace."

Nauert said the decision to close the PLO's ‎mission was ‎consistent with U.S. ‎concerns about Palestinian ‎attempts to prompt an ‎investigation of Israel by the ‎International ‎Criminal Court.‎

U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton also ‎confirmed that ‎the PLO office in ‎Washington was being closed and that the move stemmed from concern ‎about ‎Palestinian attempts to prompt an ICC ‎investigation against Israel.‎

Bolton said he did not believe the move would shut ‎the door on the ‎long-delayed Arab-Israeli peace plan, dubbed the "deal of the century,"‎ that Trump ‎senior adviser and son-in-law Jared ‎Kushner has been ‎developing for months. Bolton stressed that ‎the plan is still being refined.‎

The Trump administration has yet to say when it ‎plans to roll out the proposed peace plan. ‎

On Tuesday, PLO envoy to Washington Husam Zomlot‎ ‎confirmed that he and his staff have been given one ‎month to pack up and leave Washington. ‎

Zomlot said the mission's closure would not deter ‎Palestinians from seeking a state with east ‎Jerusalem as its capital.‎

‎"We lost the U.S. administration but we gained our ‎national rights," he said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement ‎welcoming the move.‎

‎"The U.S. made the correct decision. Israel supports ‎this action, which is meant to make it clear to the ‎Palestinians that refusing to negotiate and ‎attacking Israel in international forums will not ‎bring about peace,"‎ he said.

PLO envoy to Washington Husam Zomlot YouTube

The Prime Minister's Office in ‎Jerusalem issued a statement saying, "The ‎Palestinians' appeal to the ICC and their rejection ‎of negotiations with Israel and the U.S. are not the ‎way to achieve peace, and it is good that the U.S. ‎is taking a clear stance in the matter."‎

Deputy Minister for Public Diplomacy in the PM's Office Michael Oren praised the move.

"With the closing of the PLO office in ‎Washington, the American administration is not ‎changing the rules of the game, but simply restoring ‎them after years of neglect," he said.

‎"It should be noted that, in contrast to previous ‎administrations that would reward the Palestinians ‎for abandoning the negotiations with Israel, ‎President Trump is forcing the Palestinians to pay a ‎price. As we have seen in the past, ‎giving gifts to the Palestinians only keeps them ‎away from the peace talks, and now the Americans are ‎punishing them in order to make them return to the ‎negotiation table."

Jerusalem Affairs and Heritage Minister Zeev Elkin ‎said, "The PLO under Abu Mazen [Abbas] is an ‎organization that encourages terrorism through the ‎paying of exorbitant stipends to murderers, it uses its ‎educational system and Palestinian media to incite ‎against Israel, and it spares no effort to undermine ‎us in the international arena.‎

‎"The American decision proves once again that Abu ‎Mazen is not a partner for peace, but rather an ‎obstacle to it."‎

Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein also welcomed the ‎move, saying, "The PLO's mission never focused on ‎promoting peace, rather on promoting incitement and ‎hate. This is good news for the new [Jewish] year."‎

Senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat issued a statement ‎Tuesday saying that the closure of the mission will not deter the Palestinians from seeking ICC action against Israel.‎

He ‎described the closure as a move designed "to protect Israeli ‎crimes."‎

‎"We reiterate that the rights of the Palestinian ‎people are not for sale, that we will not succumb to ‎U.S. threats and bullying," Erekat said. "Accordingly, we continue to call upon ‎the International Criminal Court to open its ‎immediate investigation into Israeli crimes." ‎

PLO Executive Committee Member Dr. Hanan Ashrawi ‎called the U.S. policy "blackmail" that "once again ‎seeks to punish the Palestinian people, who are already victims of the ruthless Israeli ‎military occupation."‎

Turkey, one of the strongest critics of Washington's ‎Middle East policy, said on Tuesday that ‎the ‎decision was a worrying step and "another sign that ‎the USA has lost its impartial stance on ‎the Middle ‎East peace process."‎

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