Trump Gets Cold Feet on Embassy Move: Report
WASHINGTON (Dispatches) -- President Donald Trump is assessing whether moving the U.S. Embassy in Occupied Palestine to Jerusalem Al-Quds would help or hurt prospects for clinching a "peace” deal, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said, revealing Trump's criteria for a decision that could reverberate throughout the volatile Middle East.
Since taking office, Trump has backed away from his campaign pledge to move the embassy in a gesture to the Zionist regime of Israel, instead saying he's still studying the issue. But Tillerson linked Trump's deliberations directly to his aspirations for brokering Mideast "peace”.
"The president is being very careful to understand how such a decision would impact the peace process," Tillerson said in an interview broadcast Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press."
He said Trump's decision would be informed by feedback from all sides, including "whether Israel views it as helpful to a peace initiative or perhaps a distraction."
Trump's decision is being closely watched as the president prepares to depart Friday on his first foreign trip. After stopping in Saudi Arabia, Trump will visit both Occupied Palestine and the Palestinian territories.
Al-Quds’ status is one of the most emotionally charged issues in the conflict, with both sides laying claims. The occupying regime captured East Jerusalem Al-Quds - claimed by Palestinians for the capital of a future independent state - from Jordan in 1967 and annexed it, a move not internationally recognized.
U.S. presidents of both parties have repeatedly waived a U.S. law requiring the embassy be moved to Jerusalem Al-Quds. The most recent waiver - signed by former President Barack Obama - expires on June 1. Trump is expected to sign a six-month renewal of the waiver before it expires, as he continues deliberating.
In another sign the White House is proceeding cautiously, Trump's ambassador to Occupied Palestine, David Friedman, plans to work out of the current embassy in Tel Aviv rather than out of the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem Al-Quds, as some had urged him to do. Friedman, who owns an apartment in Jerusalem Al-Quds, is expected to live in the U.S. ambassador's official residence in the Tel Aviv suburb of Herziliya.
Palestinians argue moving the embassy would prejudge one of the most sensitive issues in the conflict, undermining America's status as an impartial mediator. There have been some signs that the Zionist regime, while publicly supportive of moving the embassy, has quietly raised concerns that doing so could enflame the political and security situation.
In the interview, Tillerson downplayed suggestions that the U.S. needed to deal decisively with Russia's interference in the U.S. election before it could pursue better relations with Moscow. Though Tillerson said he'd seen the intelligence implicating Russia and believed there was no question Russia meddled, he said it was just one of a "broad range of important issues that have to be addressed in the U.S.-Russia relationship."
He said the notion of a "reset" with Russia - which both Obama and President George W. Bush pursued - was misguided.
"You cannot erase the past. You cannot start with a clean state," Tillerson said "We're starting with the slate we have, and all the problems we have are in that slate."