KUSHNER IN BAHRAIN: CRITICIZING OUR PLAN WON’T HELP PALESTINIANS
“When people criticize, the question I would ask them is what is your idea, what ideas are you putting forward,” he told reporters.
BY HERB KEINON, JUNE 26, 2019 jerusalem post
ANAMA,
Bahrain – It is easy to be against things, and much more difficult to state
what you are for, and then detail it, US top official Jared Kushner said to his
critics on Wednesday at the end of the “Peace to Prosperity” workshop here.
“When people criticize, the question I would ask them is what is your idea,
what ideas are you putting forward,” he told reporters in a briefing after a day of sessions devoted to how to invest in
the Palestinian territories and in the region.
“It is easy to be against things, but that is not going to help the Palestinian people, it is not going to help the region,” Kushner said. “But what we’ve tried to do is take the harder task of being for something. And we’ve put out 140 pages of details.”
Kushner said that in politics people
don’t like putting out detail, because detail invites criticism: “We are
actually seeking constructive feedback, and then we are going to modify it and
move forward.”
Kushner said that the administration has no intention of “punishing” the Palestinian
leadership for boycotting the conference. “This isn’t about punishing the
Palestinian people one way or the other; we are trying to help the Palestinian
people,” he said.
He added that much of the criticism has come from people who have been involved
with the issue for a very long time and “can get very jumpy” when things are
not done their way.
“The ways of the past have not
worked, and we are going to keep doing it in a way that is a logical
framework,” he added. The Palestinians, he said, “don’t have a great track
record in getting a deal done.”
Kushner said that the conference was
specifically designed to invite finance ministers – the finance ministers of
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Qatar were on hand –
rather than foreign ministers, because the “traditional policy community” is
“stuck” on the issue and seems unable to bring it forward.
He said that those who drew up the
administration’s economic plan “were not aware of what is in the political
plan,” which will be rolled out at a still yet-to-be-determined date.
“We’ll get to the political plan when we are ready to get to the political
plan,” he said.
The last session of the conference
included the finance ministers of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates.
UAE Minister
of State for Financial Affairs Obaid al-Tayer gently chided the Palestinian
Authority leadership for not showing up at the conference.
“We need to provide prosperity to the Palestinians, and they have to aspire for
a better future,” he said. “If this is the initiative on the table, and what is
being discussed, we should give it a chance.”
Bahraini Foreign Minister Sheikh Khalid bin Ahmed al-Khalifa also indicated in
an interview with Channel 13 that the Palestinians made a mistake by not
participating in the conference.
“It is always a mistake to miss an opportunity to achieve peace,” he said.
“Yes, this has nothing to do with the [political] peace plan the US will
propose. But this was an opportunity that we wanted to see them here, but they
chose not to come.”
Asked what his message was to the
Israeli public, Khalifa said, “Yes, you do have peace with Egypt and Jordan,
and some kind of understanding with the Palestinians. But this is not the limit
of the scope of where you belong. Israel is a country in the Middle East. It is
part of the heritage of this region. The Jewish people have a place among us.
So communication needs to be a prerequisite for solving all the dispute. We
should talk.”
In an interview with KAN News, Khalifa
said, “This is an opportunity not to be missed.” He likened it to the Camp
David Accords which brought peace between Egypt and Israel, which he said was a
“game-changer.”
“I think if we take this matter [the conference] seriously, it could be a very
important game-changer,” he said.
The one Palestinian businessman who spoke at the conference, Ashraf Jabari from
Hebron, said that the PA leadership did not boycott the conference, because it
was not invited. “It is a conference for businesspeople,” he said.
Jabari was one of about a dozen Palestinian businesspeople who bucked the PA
pressure and showed up at the event.
Asked by Kushner at one of the sessions on Wednesday what he would do were he
the head of the PA, former British prime minister Tony Blair said that he
learned two lessons in politics: Think creatively about one’s situation, and
always engage.
