Jared Kushner tells interns 'let's not focus' on history when it comes to Middle East peace talks
Jared Kushner is done learning about the Middle East.
“We don’t want a history lesson,” Kushner told a room full of
congressional interns in what was supposed to be an off-the-record lecture.
“We’ve read enough books. Let’s focus on how do you come up with a conclusion
to the situation.”
The senior adviser and Presidential son-in-law’s remarks on
Monday focused on the difficulty of brokering peace between the Palestinians
and Israel.
A partial recording of the nearly hour-long address
was obtained and released by Wired magazine.
Kushner, in the published portion, describes how he was
tasked to figure out a peace deal.
“So first of all, this is one of the ones I was asked to
take on, and I did with this something that I do with every problem set you
get,” the former real estate executive said.
His research into the topic showed him “not a whole lot has
been accomplished over the last 40 or 50 years.”
After speaking with “a lot of people,” he’s determined “this
is a very emotionally charged situation.”
What’s gotten under his skin, however, is people explaining
hot points.
“Everyone finds an issue, that, ‘You have to understand what
they did then’ and ‘You have to understand that they did this,’” he told the
interns. “But how does that help us get peace? Let’s not focus on that.”
Kushner’s Middle East peace work is part of his grocery list
of White House duties, which also includes streamlining government operations.
The former real estate executive toured Iraq in April,
and ventured to the West Bank in June to meet with
Palestinian Authority president Mahmous Abbas.
Kushner traveled in April to meet with U.S. officials in
Iraq.
That meeting didn’t go well, however. Palestinian officials
told the Haaretz newspaper Abbas was “greatly disappointed” by the meeting,
held in the West Bank, and Kushner’s envoy “sounded like Netanyahu’s advisers
and not like fair arbiters.”
But Kushner’s had more success working things out since them
and no one has leaked to the media in the process, he said during the Capitol
Hill lecture.
He pointed to a recent water deal between Israel, the
Palestinians and Jordan.
“That was one thing that we achieved, which we were quite
happy about — which is, you know, (a) small thing, but it’s actually a pretty
big thing over there,” he told the room.
The other was negotiating security measures at a holy site
where two Israeli police officers were recently killed.
He concludes by rhetorically asking what makes the Trump
approach to a peace deal different.
“I don’t know,” Kushner said. “I’m sure everyone that’s
tried this has been unique in some ways, but again we’re trying to follow very
logically.”
Other portions of Kushner’s speech have trickled out,
despite warnings not to breach the agreement.
Kushner said it was impossible for his father-in-law’s
Presidential campaign couldn’t have colluded with Russia because it was too
disorganized, Foreign Policy reported Monday.
“They thought we colluded, but we couldn’t even collude with
our local offices,” Kushner said, the magazine reported from notes provided by
a source.
Kushner, who met with several Russian officials during the
campaign, privately testified before congressional committees last week over
the encounters.
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