Advertisement

Pence visits Western Wall amid tensions with Palestinians

 
JERUSALEM, ISRAEL - JANUARY 23:  US Vice President Mike Pence touches the wall durung a visit in the Western Wall on January 23, 2018 in Jerusalem, Israel. Pence said on Monday that the US embassy would move to Jerusalem by the end of the year.  (Photo by Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images) 775106193
JERUSALEM, ISRAEL - JANUARY 23: US Vice President Mike Pence touches the wall durung a visit in the Western Wall on January 23, 2018 in Jerusalem, Israel. Pence said on Monday that the US embassy would move to Jerusalem by the end of the year. (Photo by Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images) 775106193
Published Jan. 23, 2018

JERUSALEM — Vice President Mike Pence placed his hand on the hallowed Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City on Tuesday as he wrapped up a four-day trip to the Mideast that ended with Palestinians still fuming over the Trump administration's decision to recognize the city as Israel's capital.

On a solemn visit to the holiest site where Jews can pray, Pence tucked a small white note of prayer in the wall's cracks after touring the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

During his first trip to the region as vice president, Pence sought to enlist the help of Arab leaders in Egypt and Jordan on the Mideast peace process and used a high-profile speech to the Knesset to reaffirm President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital and accelerate plans to open a U.S. embassy in Jerusalem.

But Pence's willingness to meet with Palestinian leaders — he told the Associated Press in an interview that the "door's open" — was rebuffed by President Mahmoud Abbas, who canceled meetings last month and offered a not-so-subtle snub by overlapping with Pence in Jordan from Saturday evening until midday Sunday.

Several Arab lawmakers disrupted the start of Pence's speech to the Knesset, holding signs that said, "Jerusalem is the capital of Palestine."

Much of Pence's trip focused on working with U.S. partners to counter terrorism and make the case for persecuted Christian minorities in the Middle East. But shortly before Air Force Two departed Jerusalem, Abbas' ruling Fatah party called for a general strike to protest Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital — another escalation after the Trump administration had raised hopes of a cooling-down period.

"The trip made zero progress in bringing the Palestinians back to the table," Ilan Goldenberg, director of the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, wrote in an email. "In fact, it probably only hardened the Palestinian position."

Aaron David Miller, a Wilson Center distinguished fellow who served as a State Department Middle East analyst and negotiator, said the trip shouldn't be judged in terms of accomplishments. Pence wasn't going to make any breakthroughs, largely because of the Palestinian freeze-out after Trump's announcement, he said.

In negotiations like those hoped for between the Israelis and Palestinians, Miller said, the third party in those talks needs to prod and cajole using both honey and vinegar.

But, Miller said, "we've taken the application of the honey to an extreme."