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Analysis

Trump's Middle East policy will become hostage to trouble back home

Kushner will now take a back seat over the Russia probe, and the State Department in Washington is still not fully staffed

May 29, 2017 09:52
AFP_OQ4F0
2 min read

Ever since Donald Trump’s election nearly seven months ago, the Israeli government has been receiving mixed signals from him and his various circles of advisers.

He promised to move the US Embassy to Jerusalem, then seemed to renege on the promise. Various Trump advisers allowed Israeli right-wingers to believe that under him Israel could build at will in the West Bank and even annex parts of it, then the president surprised Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during their joint press conference in Washington by asking him to “rein in a bit” settlement building.

Mr Trump appointed staunch supporters of Israel to key posts overseeing the peace process, including his son-in-law Jared Kushner and personal attorney Jason Greenblatt; and another of his attorneys, David Friedman, a donor to settlement groups, as the ambassador to Israel.

At the same time, however, veteran officials from previous administrations with a much more critical attitude towards Israel were retained by the National Security Council to work on the brief.