' Trump, Palestinians are high on agenda of annual Arab League summit - Sudarsan Raghavan & Ruth Eglash

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Trump, Palestinians are high on agenda of annual Arab League summit

 Sudarsan Raghavan & Ruth Eglash

By Sudarsan Raghavan & Ruth Eglash The Washington Post

Published March 29, 2017

Balaam and Dostoevsky

DEAD SEA, Jordan - Faced with multiple crises and wary of President Donald Trump's approach toward the Middle East, leaders of a divided Arab world hope to forge common positions on the region's most pressing concerns when they meet today for their annual summit.

In particular, the Arab leaders are widely expected to reiterate support for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, sending a strong message to the White House. Trump has indicated willingness to break from long-held U.S. support for a sovereign Palestinian state alongside Israel, a shift that could damage peace efforts.

The Arab leaders are also expected to stress their opposition to Trump's campaign promise to move the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The holy city is claimed by both Israelis and Palestinians as their capital, and many fear that relocating the embassy there could trigger violence in Israel and across the Muslim world.

A draft statement, reportedly drawn up by the Palestinian delegation and approved by the foreign ministers of the Arab League, reads that the league's members "reaffirm their commitment to the two-state solution,"according to Agence France-Presse.

The memorandum calls "all countries to respect U.N. Security Council resolutions that reject Israel's annexation of occupied east Jerusalem" and "not to move their embassies" to Jerusalem.

The gathering comes at a time of frustration across the Arab world over the inability of its leaders, fractured by politics, geography and sect, to resolve the Middle East's bloody conflicts, its wobbly economies and high youth unemployment rates. Arab governments are divided over the way forward in Syria, Libya and Yemen.

"It is a very difficult reality that we are living in," Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi told journalists gathered in this tranquil resort area. "There are numerous challenges facing all of us. Challenges of terror, challenges of continuing occupation, crises in Syria, Libya and Yemen, and that has led to an erosion of trust that people have in the regional Arab order."

Still, it's unlikely there will be any serious push to end the region's deadliest conflict - the Syrian civil war. Arab leaders remain fractured over the future role of President Bashar Assad and which factions to support, and those divides have permitted Russia, Turkey and Iran to play a greater role in the conflict.

Saudi Arabia's King Salman and Egyptian President Abdel Fatah el-Sissi are attending the summit, presenting an opportunity for a rapprochement between their countries. Tensions have been high in recent months, largely over Syria. Riyadh backs the Syrian opposition, but Egypt is pushing for a political deal that could keep Assad in power. Saudi Arabia is also displeased that Egypt has not contributed troops to a Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen. In October, the Saudis cut off oil aid to Egypt, but the shipments resumed this month.

Amid the tumult, a key message the Arab leaders at the summit want to send is one of unity. And the Palestinian cause allows that possibility.

Several leaders at the summit, including Sissi, Jordan's King Abdullah and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, will travel next month to Washington to meet Trump. The Jordanian monarch, government officials said, plans to discuss with Trump the perils of religious extremism; terrorism; the fighting in Syria, Libya and Yemen; and, in particular, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

That conflict, for decades the core cause of the Arab world, has been neglected for the past few yearsamid the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 and the wars that followed in Syria, Iraq, Libya and Yemen, The summit's host, Jordan is seeking to again reposition the Palestinians' plight as a central cause for all Arabs.

The Arab leaders are expected to reaffirm a Saudi-led peace plan, known as the Arab Peace Initiative, that was proposed 15 years ago. It calls for Israel to withdraw from lands seized in 1967 in exchange for full diplomatic and economic relations with moderate Arab and Muslim nations. That would allow the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state that included the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.

Ghassan Khatib, a professor of political science at Birzeit University in the West Bank town of Ramallah, said the summit is important to counter recent suggestions by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that reaching peace with the Palestinians must begin with a wider regional initiative.

"He believes that after having normal relations with the moderate Arab states, it will be easier to achieve peace with the Palestinians," Khatib said

If the Arab states, he added, restated their commitment to the Arab Peace Initiative, it would go against the impression Trump gave in a news conference last month with Netanyahu that he appeared to accept the Israeli leader's proposal for a regional peace process.

"If the resolution that comes out of the summit is support for the Saudi initiative, then it will contradict Netanyahu, and we hope it will play a role in shaping the final position of the United States on this issue," Khatib said.

The Arab leaders are being asked to support the Saudi plan in its current form, analysts said. Any negotiations could weaken their position, members of the Palestinian delegation fear.

Efraim Inbar, founding director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar Ilan University in Tel Aviv, said the issue is simple - if the Arab League is willing to negotiate over its plan, there is something to talk about.

"Until now, the Saudi plan was a take-it-or-leave-it plan, which Israel was not ready for," Inbar said.

"Netanyahu is willing to negotiate if the Saudis are ready to come to the table," he added.

Two other areas where the Arab leaders could show unity are Iran and terrorism. The predominantly Sunni Arab leaders, particularly Saudi Arabia, are wary of Tehran's Shiite theocracy. In Yemen, the Iranians are widely thought to be backing Shiite Houthi rebels, the enemies of a Saudi-led coalition waging a campaign on behalf of the beleaguered Yemeni government.

"Iran's intervention in Arab affairs will occupy a major part of discussions and will certainly be condemned, but Jordan will also seek to send a message to Tehran to opt for diplomacy and normalize relations with the Arab world," wrote Osama al-Sharif , a political commentator, in the regional daily Arab News.

Safadi, the Jordanian foreign minister, said there is a political will among the Arab leaders to follow through on their pronouncements to address the challenges of the region.

He added that they would work more effectively on combating terrorism, "which we consider a threat to us Arabs and Muslims first because it has killed more of us than it did any other race and nation."

"We'll move forward to create a new reality of hope, opportunity, and of peace and stability in the region," Safadi said.

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