JERUSALEM: President Donald Trump’s special Mideast envoy lashed out at a veteran Palestinian official on Sunday, saying his “false claims” and rhetoric haven’t brought peace closer.
Jason Greenblatt was responding in Israel’s Haaretz newspaper to an earlier op-ed by Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat accusing American officials of acting as “spokespeople” for Israel and criticising the US for moving its embassy to Jerusalem.
The exchange comes shortly before the Trump administration is expected to unveil its Middle East peace plan. Trump has promised to pursue the “ultimate deal” between Israelis and Palestinians.
Greenblatt wrote that Erekat’s claims “were in many respects simply inaccurate.”
Erekat had condemned the US for the embassy move noting it occurred amid violence along the Gaza border, just 45 miles away. On the day of its opening in Jerusalem an estimated 59 Palestinians were killed in Gaza at a mass rally led by the Islamic militant group Hamas that rules the territory.
The use of potentially lethal force at the weekly protests has drawn international criticism. Israel accuses Hamas of using demonstrators as human shields while trying to carry out attacks and says it is defending its sovereign border and communities nearby.
Erekat wrote that the contrast between the two events that day “aptly demonstrates the complete US and Israeli denial of the Palestinian history of dispossession.”
Greenblatt struck back on Sunday.
“For far too long, the United States has turned a deaf ear to such words, but ignoring hateful and false words has not brought peace and it will never bring peace,” he wrote.
“While some protesters were peaceful, many were quite violent. In fact, by Hamas’ own admission, more than 80 percent of those killed were Hamas operatives.”
He reiterated Trumps’ declaration on Jerusalem that boundaries of Israeli sovereignty are to be determined in peace negotiations and that the U.S supports the status quo at a Jerusalem holy site that is revered by both Jews and Muslims.
Palestinians saw the decision as siding with Israel on the most sensitive issue in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and say it disqualifies the US from its traditional role of Mideast peace broker.
Israel captured east Jerusalem, home to key sites sacred to Jews, Muslims and Christians, in the 1967 war. Palestinians claim the territory for its future capital. Israel claims the entire city as its eternal capital.