Jerusalem Post: Kushner's Promise to UAE Confused Israeli Plans to Annex Parts of West Bank

An Israeli soldier argues with a Palestinian as he tries to reach Tubas in the Jordan Valley. (EPA)
An Israeli soldier argues with a Palestinian as he tries to reach Tubas in the Jordan Valley. (EPA)
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Jerusalem Post: Kushner's Promise to UAE Confused Israeli Plans to Annex Parts of West Bank

An Israeli soldier argues with a Palestinian as he tries to reach Tubas in the Jordan Valley. (EPA)
An Israeli soldier argues with a Palestinian as he tries to reach Tubas in the Jordan Valley. (EPA)

New reports in Tel Aviv, including a secret letter sent by former US President Donald Trump to then-Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, revealed that everything was ready in Washington to authorize the annexation of about a third of Palestinian land in the West Bank to Israel.

The third of Palestinian territory that were up for annexation included the Jordan Valley and northern Dead Sea areas and Jewish settlements in the West Bank.

In exchange for the annexation, Israel would agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state in the remaining two thirds of the West Bank, revealed the Jerusalem Post in a report.

The deal was supported by the entire Trump administration. This resulted in Trump sending a letter confirming his approval and Netanyahu traveled to Washington for a final agreement. Two Jewish settlement leaders traveled with Netanyahu.

One of the leaders backed the then-prime minister’s direction, but the other leader considered the deal a wrong decision because it would grant sovereignty to a Palestinian state.

But Trump's son-in-law and former senior adviser Jared Kushner was planning for Israel a strategic gift, which was to establish normal and peaceful relations with new Arab countries.

It was later discovered that the United Arab Emirates demanded the annulment of annexation to join the normalization plans with Israel.

So Kushner delayed giving approval for the annexation, at first on the pretext of the coronavirus pandemic, and in the end revealed the truth of his agreement with the UAE to cancel the takeover.

In a three-page letter dated January 26, 2020, two days before Trump presented his Vision for Peace in the White House, the president summarized some of its details, reported the Post in its exclusive report.

The details included that Israel would be able to extend sovereignty to parts of the West Bank, as delineated in the map included in the plan if Netanyahu agreed to a Palestinian state in the remaining territory on that map.

Trump asked Netanyahu to adopt "the policies outlined in... the Vision [for peace] regarding those territories of the West Bank identified as becoming part of a future Palestinian state."

"In exchange for Israel implementing these policies," the US president continued, "and formally adopting detailed territorial plans not inconsistent with the Conceptual Map attached to my Vision – the United States will recognize Israeli sovereignty in those areas of the West Bank that my vision contemplates as being part of Israel."

The letter did not delineate a timeline for sovereignty recognition.

Netanyahu’s response was that Israel would move forward with sovereignty plans “in the coming days,” according to his spokesman, who did not provide the letter.

The letter calls into question the narrative set out in "Breaking History: A White House Memoir", a new book by Kushner.

In it, Kushner asserts that former US ambassador to Israel David Friedman went behind his and the president’s back and "assured Netanyahu that he would get the White House to support annexation more immediately."

"He had not conveyed this to me or anyone on my team," Kushner said.

Friedman and Netanyahu viewed the matter differently. Netanyahu’s spokesman said: "The charge that prime minister Netanyahu surprised the president and his staff with an uncoordinated announcement... is utterly baseless."



20 Migrants Die in Shipwreck Off Tunisia

Tunisian coast guards try to stop migrants at sea during their attempt to cross to Italy, off the coast off Sfax, Tunisia April 27, 2023. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui /File Photo
Tunisian coast guards try to stop migrants at sea during their attempt to cross to Italy, off the coast off Sfax, Tunisia April 27, 2023. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui /File Photo
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20 Migrants Die in Shipwreck Off Tunisia

Tunisian coast guards try to stop migrants at sea during their attempt to cross to Italy, off the coast off Sfax, Tunisia April 27, 2023. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui /File Photo
Tunisian coast guards try to stop migrants at sea during their attempt to cross to Italy, off the coast off Sfax, Tunisia April 27, 2023. REUTERS/Jihed Abidellaoui /File Photo

Tunisian authorities recovered the bodies of 20 people who appeared to have drowned after a shipwreck off the country's Mediterranean coastline, near a popular point of departure for migrants attempting to reach Europe by boat.
The country's National Guard said in a statement on Wednesday that coast guard members dispatched to the sinking ship rescued five people and retrieved the bodies of 20 others 15 miles (24 kilometers) off the coast north of Sfax. The coastline is roughly 81 miles (130 kilometers) from the Italian island of Lampedusa.
According to The Associated Press, the National Guard said that it continued to search for missing people and did not indicate how many may have been on board when the ship set off.
With assistance from Europe, authorities in Tunisia have strengthened the policing of their borders in an effort to prevent deaths at sea and combat smugglers and migrants crossing illegally to southern Europe. Yet drownings and corpses washing ashore are regularly reported, including last week when authorities found the bodies of nine people who appeared to have drowned at sea along the same stretch of coastline.
The iron boats that migrants and smugglers use to attempt to cross the Mediterranean are often unseaworthy. Though there is no official count, international groups and Tunisian NGOs believe hundreds have perished at sea this year. The United Nations' refugee agency, UNHCR, estimates more than 1,100 have died or gone missing in the central Mediterranean off the coasts of Tunisia and Libya. The Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights believes between 600 and 700 people have died or gone missing off the coast of Tunisia.
More than 19,000 migrants have embarked from Tunisia and arrived in Italy this year, including many who subsequently applied for asylum, according to UNHCR. That's far fewer than the more than 96,000 who made the journey by the same point in 2023. The majority who have arrived in Italy in 2024 have been from Bangladesh, Tunisia and Syria.
There is no official numbers regarding migrants in Tunisia. However, thousands are living in makeshift camps among olive trees near Sfax's coastline.