Impact of Trump-orchestrated Middle East peace deals hits new high

President Donald J. Trump delivers remarks with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Tuesday, Jan. 28, 2020, in the East Room of the White House to unveil details of the Trump administration’s Middle East Peace Plan. (Official White House photo by Shealah Craighead)

The Middle East peace agreements the Trump administration brokered between Arab nations and Israel were accomplished despite the doubts by the “deep state” in Washington.

So far, Morocco, Bahrain, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates have reached agreements to normalize relations with Israel.

But now there’s a new development that shows how right the Trump administration was to abandon the policy of appeasing the Palestinians and push forward with Arab peace proposals regardless of the opposition of Palestinian factions.

The Middle East Media Research Institute reported that because of the peace deals, Palestinian officials want to restart the negotiations with Israel and renew security and civilian coordination.

Also, they have ceased their attacks on the Arab countries that have normalized relations with Israel, the MEMRI said.

MEMRI said the PA’s opposition to negotiations with Israel produced a “deep political and economic crisis” that led to the suspension of American aid, the termination of the Oslo Accords and all ties with Israel. Funding has been so tight the PA’s employees have not been getting full pay.

“The Arab media, and especially the Palestinian media, directed harsh criticism at the PA, accusing it of lacking political vision and of taking a hardline stance that is ineffective and undermines the wellbeing of its citizens. It appears that the election of Biden provided the PA with a way out of the crisis and an opportunity to renew the contacts with Israel.”

MEMRI said the “renewal of the civilian coordination with Israel enabled the PA to receive the tax revenues collected by Israel on its behalf, and for the time being Israel has apparently stopped deducting from these revenues the cost of the stipends paid by the PA to terrorists and their families. At the same time, the PA is seeking a way to continue paying these stipends while avoiding Israeli and American sanctions. So far, it seems to be eying administrative measures aimed at disguising the payments and deceiving Israel and the West, who oppose them.”

The affirmation that PA leadership now is ready to renew talks with Israel came right after the U.S. presidential election.

“In statements on November 4, 2020, one day after the election, PA President Mahmoud ‘Abbas and Prime Minister Muhammad Shtayyeh stressed the Palestinian leadership’s willingness to renew negotiations based on international law and under the auspices of the UN,” the report said.

A short time later, PA Foreign Minister Riyad Al-Maliki said “the state of Palestine is willing to renew its contacts with the new U.S. administration, based on the initial contacts that have been recently made with it, and based on the stated position of the president- and vice president-elect.”

And PA officials have stopped criticizing the nations that have made peace deals.

The criticism, the report said, likely was isolating the PA in the Arab world.

“This is not to say that the PA leadership has stopped expressing opposition to the agreements with Israel, but it is doing so through quiet diplomatic channels,” the report said.

And the PA has renewed coordination with Israel on several issues, it said.

The report noted several issues remain unresolved, such as taxes,

President Trump has been nominated for a Nobel prize based on his work on the agreements.

When the fourth deal came through, he said: “Another HISTORIC breakthrough today! Our two GREAT friends Israel and the Kingdom of Morocco have agreed to full diplomatic relations – a massive breakthrough for peace in the Middle East!”

WND columnist Michael Brown said America is watching “history unfold before our eyes.”

“And it is America that is brokering these deals with Israel and these Muslim nations,” he pointed out.

“On one of my recent trips to Israel, I was struck by the degree of enthusiastic support for Trump from the man on the street, among both the religious to the irreligious. (There are plenty of both in Israel!),” he wrote. “In the rough and tumble world of Israeli politics, Trump’s worst qualities hardly raise a concern. Instead, for them, they saw results, tangible results. And some of those results were the difference between life and death.”

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This article was originally published by the WND News Center.

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