US EMBASSY TO OPEN IN JERUSALEM 'BEFORE END OF NEXT YEAR' SAID U.S. VICE PRESIDENT MIKE PENCE
US Vice President Mike Pence, left, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem on Monday. |
US Vice President
Mike Pence Monday announces on the Israeli parliament the US will open its embassy
in Jerusalem "before the end of next year", where he reiterated the
city was "the capital of the state of Israel."
Pence is the most
senior US official to visit Jerusalem since President Donald Trump's
announcement last month that his government recognized the city as Israel's
capital and would move its embassy there, upending seven decades of US policy
on the issue.
Both Israelis and
Palestinians consider Jerusalem as their capital.
At the Knesset,
Pence said it was thanks to Trump that "the alliance between our two
countries has never been stronger, and the friendship between our peoples has
never been deeper -- and I am here to convey a simple message from the hearts
of the American people. America stands with Israel."
"We stand with
Israel because your cause is our cause, your values are our values, and your
fight is our fight."
Pence was earlier
given a warm welcome to the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
greeted by an honor guard as the US national anthem played.
He said he was
"hopeful that we are at the dawn of a new era, of renewed discussions to
achieve a peaceful resolution to the decades-long conflict that has affected
this region."
He added that
Trump's December 6 announcement "would create an opportunity to move on in
good-faith negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority."
Welcoming his
visitor, Netanyahu said: "Mr. Vice President, I have had the privilege
over the years of standing here with hundreds of world leaders and welcome
them, all of them, to Israel's capital, Jerusalem. This is the first time that
I am standing when both leaders can say those words: 'Israel's capital Jerusalem."'
When asked whether
the US embassy could be moved to Jerusalem by next year, Netanyahu grinned and
quipped that it could be "by next week."
When asked if he was
serious, he responded: "No. But we want to do it."
Arab-Israelis to boycott Pence speech
Pence is due to give
remarks in the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, later Monday. A member of the
Knesset, Ayman Odeh, said that he and other Arab-Israeli lawmakers would
boycott the speech.
"In response to
voices that are against our decision, we will not be silent about the speech
made by a dangerous racist whose whole reason for being here is in order to
damage any chance of peace," he wrote Saturday on Twitter, announcing the
boycott.
On Monday, he wrote,
his position was unchanged, calling Pence "a dangerous man with a
messianic vision" sent by "an even more dangerous man, a political
pyromaniac, a racist and interferer."
The United States
Congress in 1995 passed a law requiring the US to move its embassy from Tel
Aviv to Jerusalem. But all US presidents before Trump have resisted acting on
the law, signing a waiver in the national interest.
At the time of his
announcement last month, Trump denied he was reversing US policy and reaffirmed
the US' commitment to helping Israelis and Palestinians reach a peace agreement.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas
has repeatedly condemned and rejected Trump's decision, saying, among other
things, that it would aid extremist organizations to wage holy wars.
Source: CNN
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