Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Pence says Jerusalem recognition will lead to peace, calls for changes to Iran nuclear deal

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence (left) and Israeli President Reuven Rivlin meet on Tuesday. Credit: Mark Neiman/GPO.
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence (left) and Israeli President Reuven Rivlin meet on Tuesday. Credit: Mark Neiman/GPO.

Vice President Mike Pence reiterated Tuesday the Trump administration’s stance that U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel will lead to peace between Israel and the Palestinians.

“President Trump truly believes that the decision the United States has made to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, we believe, will set the table for the opportunity to move forward in meaningful negotiations to achieve a lasting peace and end the decades-long conflict,” said Pence during a meeting with Israeli President Reuven Rivlin.

“Inshallah,” Rivlin replied, using the Arabic expression for “with God’s help.”

Pence’s statement came a day after he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital because he is “convinced” that it will lead to “good faith negotiations.” During his address Monday to the Israeli parliament, Pence declared that the U.S. would move its Israeli embassy to Jerusalem “before the end of next year.”

In his meeting with Rivlin, Pence also lauded the strong security cooperation between Israel and the U.S., stating that America stands “shoulder-to-shoulder” with the Jewish state in the war against radical Islamic terrorism and “the threat of the leading state sponsor of terror, Iran.”

“President Trump’s recent decision to announce that the waiver he will sign on sanctions under the Iran nuclear deal would be the last one,” said Pence. “The time has come for changes in the Iran nuclear deal.”

The mayor has shown “a troubling mix of naïveté and negligence toward the very communities he has been entrusted to protect,” Rabbi Elliot Cosgrove, of Park Avenue Synagogue, told JNS.
The federal judge found the banned student group failed to show constitutional violations or evidence that school officials coordinated with Jewish orgs to target pro-Palestinian activism.
The Massachusetts judges halted deportation cases against a Tufts doctoral student and a Columbia graduate student accused by the government of activity contrary to U.S. foreign policy.
“We need to be remembering the memories of those who were killed in the Holocaust, my grandfather being one of them,” Julie Menin, the New York City Council speaker, told JNS.
I do not want to speculate anything, but the environment after the talks is fine,” said Khawaja Asif.
“The Trump administration will never allow America to become a home for foreign nationals tied to anti-American terrorist regimes,” the State Department said.