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February 20, 2019 8:45 am
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Jordanian-Palestinian Collaboration Against the ‘Deal of the Century’

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avatar by Yoni Ben Menachem / JNS.org

Opinion

An aerial view of the Temple Mount in the Old City of Jerusalem. Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.orgAccording to senior figures in the Fatah movement, the Palestinian Authority (PA) and Jordan have begun cooperation in anticipation of the announcement of the new US peace plan that Donald Trump has referred to as the “deal of the century.”

This new collaboration is based on understandings reached between Jordan’s King Abdullah and Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas in August 2017, after the crisis involving metal detectors that were set up at the gates to the Temple Mount.

Abdullah, for his part, made a special visit to the Muqata in Ramallah and agreed with Abbas on setting up a joint committee for strategic coordination on the Mount.

The first step in the Jordan-PA alliance was already taken a few days ago, and is connected to the Mount. At the behest of Abdullah, the Jordanian government approved the expansion of the Council of the Islamic Wakf and the Holy Places in Jerusalem from 11 to 18 members.

For the first time, the council, which was always manned by pro-Jordanian figures, will include senior figures connected to the Palestinian Authority and Fatah, a move that Jordan has avoided since 1994. Senior elements in Fatah call Jordan’s agreement a “historic change” aimed at enabling joint control of the Mount.

Jordan has special status on the Mount, as the 1994 peace treaty with Israel makes it the custodian of Jerusalem’s holy places.

According to senior Fatah sources, the Jordanians and the Palestinians fear that Trump’s Mideast peace plan seeks to transfer responsibility for the Holy Basin in eastern Jerusalem, including the Temple Mount, to joint Arab administration, and give Saudi Arabia a special status at the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

The expanded council’s first meeting, which was held in the Old City of Jerusalem, saw the participation of senior representatives of the Jordanian Wakf Ministry, who discussed ways to strengthen control of the Al-Aqsa Mosque.

And who are the PA.-connected figures added to the new council?

The most senior representative is Adnan al-Husseini, who serves officially as the PA’s minister for Jerusalem affairs. Also added were former PA Health Minister Dr. Hani al-Abedin and former PA Economy Minister Mazen Sonkrut.

Other new members include Khatam Abdel Kader, a senior Fatah figure in Jerusalem and Abbas’s adviser for Jerusalem affairs; Dr. Imad Faik Abu Kishk, dean of Al-Quds University and an associate of Jibril Rajoub; and Dr. Mahdi Abdel Hadi, a senior Fatah figure and head of the Passia Institute.

The new Jordanian-Palestinian move is a clear violation of the Oslo Accords, which prohibit PA governmental activity in eastern Jerusalem. Israel can counteract this move, but so far no measures have been taken.

At the end of the month, Trump administration senior adviser Jared Kushner and special envoy Jason Greenblatt are slated to visit several Arab states to promote the economic aspects of the Trump peace plan, which will reportedly be announced after the Israeli elections.

Abbas has already launched efforts to scuttle the new American plan. He rejected the invitation to the Warsaw Summit and went to Saudi Arabia to enlist King Salman’s opposition to the “deal of the century” and demand adherence to the 2002 Arab peace initiative.

The Jordanian-Palestinian collaboration on the Temple Mount issue, alongside the establishment by Jordan and the PA of the joint Islamic council to administer the Jerusalem holy places, is a move that spells danger for Israel, and compromises its sovereignty in Jerusalem. Israel should act against it immediately, before the US administration publicizes its new plan.

Yoni Ben Menachem, a veteran Arab affairs and diplomatic commentator for Israel Radio and Television, is a senior Middle East analyst for the Jerusalem Center. He served as Director General and Chief Editor of the Israel Broadcasting Authority.

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