No Palestinian recognition if Mideast peace plan goals unmet

US presidential adviser Jared Kushner said on Sunday
that if Palestinians are unable to meet the conditions of the new Middle East
peace plan he crafted, Israel should not take “the risk to recognize them as a
state.”
The plan laid out by Kushner, President Donald
Trump’s son-in-law, and unveiled Tuesday was warmly embraced by Israel but
curtly dismissed by the Palestinian Authority along with others in the region,
including the Arab League.
Kushner was challenged by CNN host Fareed Zakaria in
a program aired Sunday to explain why demands made of the Palestinians before
they are given a state – a free press, free elections, religious freedom, an
independent judiciary, and a reliable financial system – did not amount to “a
killer amendment.”
“There is no Arab country that would meet these
criteria, certainly not Saudi Arabia, Egypt” or other countries Kushner has
worked with closely, Zakaria said.
Kushner replied that the Palestinian territories
amount to “a police state... not exactly a thriving democracy.”
“For the Palestinians, if they want their people to
live better lives, we now have a framework to do it,” he said.
“If they don’t think they can uphold these
standards, then I don’t think we can get Israel to take the risk to recognize them
as a state.”
Kushner added: “The only thing more dangerous than
what we have now is a failed state.”
Trump unveiled the plan in a White House event
attended by a smiling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who applauded
it as “a great plan for Israel... (and) a great plan for peace.