
Saudi Arabia Says Palestinian State a Must for Ties With Israel
'For the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, normalization with Israel can only come through the establishment of a Palestinian state,' Bin Farhan said at a United Nations press conference with his French counterpart, Jean-Noël Barrot, on the two-state solution.
'That position remains the same, and it is based on a strong conviction that only through the establishment of a Palestinian state and only through addressing the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people to self-determination can we have sustainable peace and real integration in the region,' the Saudi foreign minister said.
US President Donald Trump has been pushing for Saudi Arabia's entry into the Abraham Accords, a series of normalization agreements his first administration brokered between Arab states and Israel.
The kingdom on different occasions reaffirmed Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's demand for an independent Palestinian state as part of any normalization agreement.
The current humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip is a stumbling block to reaching such a deal, with hunger convulsing the shattered Palestinian enclave. There is 'no credibility to have a conversation about normalization with constant death and suffering and destruction in Gaza,' Bin Farhan said.
There has been growing international pressure on Western governments to push Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to step up efforts to address the crisis.
Trump said the US would work on a new effort to provide food aid to alleviate starvation in Gaza along with other governments and organizations, including the UK and European Union. He laid out a proposal during a Monday meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Turnberry, Scotland.
Read: Gaza Crisis Spirals as Aid Groups Say Starvation Spreads
Trump, who earlier this year proposed that the US takes over Gaza, said he is 'not going to take a position' on Palestinian statehood but doesn't mind if Starmer does.
The British premier said it was a matter of 'when not if' the UK recognizes Palestine as a state, but that it must be one step along a pathway to peace.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.
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He continued to repeat this claim in the following weeks, even as India consistently denied that the US had played any role in the agreement. Here's a list of statements by the US President on the India-Pakistan conflict so far: 10 May: 'After a long night of talks mediated by the United States, I am pleased to announce that India and Pakistan have agreed to a FULL AND IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE." 11 May: 'I am proud that the USA was able to help you arrive at this historic and heroic decision. While not even discussed, I am going to increase trade substantially with both of these great nations. Additionally, I will work with you both to see if, after a 'thousand years,' a solution can be arrived at concerning Kashmir.' 12 May: 'We stopped a nuclear conflict. I think it could have been a bad nuclear war.' 13 May: '…My administration successfully brokered a historic ceasefire to stop the escalating violence between India and Pakistan. I used trade to a large extent… And they both have very powerful leaders, strong leaders.' 14 May: 'We convinced them… Let's go and make trade deals. If we can make trade deals, we like that much better than nuclear weapons.' 15 May: 'We talked to them about trade. Let's do trade instead of war. Pakistan was very happy with that and India was very happy with that… They've been fighting for about a 1000 years. I said I could settle that up.' 17 May: 'Those are major nuclear powers… It was getting deeper and more missiles. Everyone was stronger. Where the next one 's going to be, you know what? The N word. I think they were very close… I said we're going to talk about trade. We're going to do a lot of trade.' 22 May: 'If you take a look at what we just did with Pakistan and India — we settled that whole thing. I settled it through trade. We're doing a big deal with India. We're doing a big deal with Pakistan.' 30 May: 'We stopped India and Pakistan from fighting. I believe that could have turned out into a nuclear disaster. We talk trade… We can't trade with people who are shooting at each other and potentially using nuclear weapons.' 31 May: 'We were able to stop potentially a nuclear war through trade as opposed through bullets. You know, normally they do it through bullets. We do it through trade. We had a very nasty potential war going on between Pakistan and India.' 06 June: 'We solved a big problem, a nuclear problem potentially with India and Pakistan. I talked about trade and said, we are not doing trade if you guys are going to be throwing bombs at each other. They both stopped.' 18 June: 'Two very smart people decided not to keep going with that war; that could have been a nuclear war.' 21 June: 'I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize for stopping the War between India and Pakistan.' 25 June: 'India and Pakistan…I ended that with a series of phone calls on trade. I said if you're going to go fighting each other, we're not doing any trade deal. They said: I want to do the trade deal. We stopped the nuclear war." 27 June: 'India and Pakistan. That was going to be maybe nuclear… I said to Scott and Howard: cancel all deals with India and Pakistan. They're not trading with us because they're in a war.' 08 July: 'Very, very big one was India and Pakistan. We stopped that over trade. We said that we are not going to be dealing with you at all if you are gonna fight. They were maybe at a nuclear stage.' 15 July: 'India and Pakistan would have been a nuclear war within another week. I said, we ' re not going to talk to you about trade unless you get this thing settled. And they did.' 19 July: 'Planes were being shot out of there. I think five jets were shot down, actually. These are two serious nuclear countries. India and Pakistan were going at it… and we got it solved through trade. We said: you guys want to make a trade deal. We're not making a trade deal if you're going to be throwing around weapons, and maybe nuclear weapons.' 26 July: 'It (Cambodia-Thailand conflict) very much reminds me of the conflict between Pakistan and India, which was brought to a successful halt.' 28 July: 'We do a lot of trade with Thailand and Cambodia. Yet I'm reading that they're killing each other… I say this should be an easy one for me because I settled India and Pakistan… If I can use trade to do that, then it's my honour." With inputs from agencies