President Donald Trump delivered a blunt reminder of U.S. policy to his British allies on Thursday, emphasizing a “negotiations first” approach to Palestinian statehood and publicly disagreeing with the UK’s plan for unilateral recognition. The remarks, made in London next to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, underscored a significant and growing policy divide between the two nations.
Trump’s statement was a robust defense of the principle that a Palestinian state should only be recognized after it has been created through a direct, bilateral peace agreement with Israel. The U.S. sees any other path as a dangerous shortcut that could destabilize the region. This position was recently backed by action at the United Nations, where the U.S. defied global consensus by voting against a resolution aimed at advancing the two-state solution.
Prime Minister Starmer responded by outlining the alternative philosophy guiding his government. He acknowledged the American view but argued that the UK’s plan to recognize Palestine is intended to serve as a “catalyst” for, not a replacement of, negotiations. He positioned the move as a strategic effort to rebalance the diplomatic scales and create fresh momentum for a peace process that has long been moribund.
The core of the issue is a strategic disagreement on leverage. The U.S. believes the most powerful piece of leverage is the promise of statehood and that it should not be given away prematurely. The UK, conversely, is now operating on the belief that granting recognition creates a new form of leverage—the international legitimacy of a Palestinian state—that can be used to push for a more just and lasting peace.
While the immediate diplomatic crisis was averted by Starmer’s decision to delay the policy’s execution, the London meeting has highlighted a fundamental split. It demonstrates that on the complex issue of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the United States and the United Kingdom are no longer reading from the same script.
‘Negotiations First’: Trump Reminds UK of US Stance on Palestine
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