Israeli minister: Palestinians can’t stop US embassy move

Israeli minister: Palestinians can’t stop US embassy move
President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to move the US Embassy building in the Israeli coastal city of Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. (AFP)
Updated 16 January 2017
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Israeli minister: Palestinians can’t stop US embassy move

Israeli minister: Palestinians can’t stop US embassy move

JERUSALEM: An Israeli minister said Monday the Palestinians had no way to block incoming US President Donald Trump from moving his country’s embassy to Jerusalem.
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has said such a move would have consequences as it was a “red line” whose crossing would ruin hopes for a two-state solution. 
But regional cooperation minister Tzachi Hanegbi, of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party, said the Palestinians were powerless to stop it.
“What can they do? What can they do?,” he said in a briefing to reporters in Jerusalem.
“There are not going to be any consequences.”
Trump — who takes office Friday — has pledged to acknowledge Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and relocate the US embassy there from Tel Aviv.
That is bitterly opposed by Palestinians, who see it as a destructive and unilateral action, as the status of the city is contested.
They demand Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state, while Israel proclaims the entire city as its capital.
The United States and most UN member states do not recognize Jerusalem as capital of the Jewish state, and the city’s status is one of the thorniest issues of the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
On Sunday French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault warned the move would have “extremely serious consequences.”
Among the threats Abbas has made is that his government could reverse its recognition of Israel, but Hanegbi said that would be suicidal.
Others have suggested it could lead a new Palestinian intifada — or violent uprising.
“This is not a threat. This is shooting themselves in the head,” Hanegbi said in English.
“I don’t think Abu Mazen has an interest to open an intifada, I don’t think the Palestinians would like another intifada,” he added, referring to Abbas by his Arabic nickname.
He said he did not expect a “domino effect,” and that most other countries would keep their embassies in Tel Aviv.
“It is a decision reflecting the special relationship between Israel and the United States. It is not going to be a domino effect.”