US cuts separate reporting channel for its diplomats covering Palestinians
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio decided to fully merge the US Office of Palestinian Affairs (OPA) back into the US Embassy in Jerusalem, the State Department announced on Tuesday.
The OPA was established in 2022 by then-president Joe Biden as something of a consolation for not reopening the US Consulate in Jerusalem, which served as Washington’s de facto mission to the Palestinians for decades.
The consulate was shuttered by the Trump administration in 2019, and its staff was merged into the US Embassy in Jerusalem where they reported directly to the US ambassador.
The Biden administration wanted to reopen the consulate two years later but needed Israeli approval, which it was unable to secure.
Instead, Biden sufficed with establishing the OPA, which remained within the embassy, but an independent reporting channel was re-established so that its diplomats could send cables directly to Washington.
Supporters of OPA said the Palestinian viewpoint was often marginalized by the Israeli one when cables filtered through the US ambassador. Opponents argued that the separate systems led to a lack of unity in US messaging back to Washington.
The merger “will restore the first Trump term framework of a unified US diplomatic mission in Israel’s capital that reports to the US Ambassador to Israel [Mike] Huckabee, [who] will take the steps necessary to........
© The Times of Israel
