Trump
Administration Discourages Use of ‘Two-State Solution”
By Ron Kampeas
JTA
April 22, 2019
The
White House is discouraging the use of the term “two-state solution” when
describing possible outcomes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
A
senior White House official on Monday confirmed to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency
a report that appeared over the weekend on Sky News Arabic, a satellite TV
station, and picked
up by the Times of Israel.
“The
two-state solution term means different things to different people,” the
official told JTA. “There is no point in using a phrase that never achieved
peace. Our plan provides a clear, realistic and detailed vision of what peace
could actually look like.”
The
Trump administration plans to release a detailed peace plan as early as June.
The plan’s lead architects are Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump’s
son-in-law and senior adivser; Jason Greenblatt, his top peace negotiator, and
David Friedman, his ambassador to Israel.
Last
month, speaking to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, Friedman said that
Israel would retain security control of the West Bank. Friedman did not
elaborate, but Palestinian leaders see control of their own defense and foreign
policy as a necessary component of statehood.