President Donald Trump’s decision to recognise
Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and eventually move the US embassy there
has angered the Palestinians, who question Washington’s role as a
sponsor of Middle East peace.
Trump’s adviser and
son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is leading efforts to restart negotiations,
though his bid has shown little public progress so far.
“We
believe the Trump administration is serious about bringing peace
between Israelis and Arabs,” Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al Jubeir, a
former ambassador to the United States, told France 24 television late
on Wednesday.
“They are working on ideas and consulting
all parties, including Saudi Arabia, and they are incorporating the
views represented to them by everybody. They have said they would need a
little bit of time to put it together to present it.”
Trump’s
decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel overturned
decades of US policy and ignored international consensus that the city’s
status should be decided only in a future peace agreement.
Israel
claims all of Jerusalem as its capital, including the eastern part
which it annexed after capturing it in the 1967 war. The Palestinians
want the eastern part of the city as capital of a future independent
state of their own.
The Trump administration argues that
any credible peace plan would put the Israeli capital in Jerusalem, and
that moving past the question can help unblock a peace process frozen
since 2014. Washington says Trump’s decision does not affect Jerusalem’s
borders or future status which can still be decided in talks.
The
US president’s aides say the peace plan could be released early next
year and Donald Trump has said he hoped for an agreed two-state deal
between the two sides.
The Saudi foreign minister
emphasised that Riyadh continued to support a two-state solution, which
Washington had indicated to the Saudis was its working proposal.
“Whether
the administration’s proposals are acceptable to the parties remains to
be seen because I don’t believe that the plan the US administration is
working on has been finalised yet,” he said.
Adel Jubeir
also denied his country had any relations with Israel despite sharing
Israel’s concern about the regional influence of Iran. He repeated that
Riyadh had a “roadmap” to establish full diplomatic relations with Tel
Aviv should there be a peace agreement with the Palestinians.
The Jewish state also says it is waiting for Washington to finish drawing up a peace plan.
“The
Americans are preparing a peace deal. They did not tell us the details.
They did not speak about a `deal of the century’. Rather, they asked
what we can accept, and they asked the Palestinians the same thing. And
they will offer as they put it something creative,” Israeli Intelligence
Minister Israel Katz said in an interview with Saudi-owned news site
Elaph, published on Wednesday.