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The US flag flies outside the then US consulate building in Jerusalem in March 2019
The US flag flies outside the then US consulate building in Jerusalem in March 2019, which Joe Biden has promised to reopen. Photograph: Ariel Schalit/AP
The US flag flies outside the then US consulate building in Jerusalem in March 2019, which Joe Biden has promised to reopen. Photograph: Ariel Schalit/AP

US Palestinian mission renamed and now reports directly to Washington

This article is more than 1 year old

Move comes after former president Donald Trump outraged Palestinians by closing consulate in 2018

The US diplomatic mission to the Palestinians in Jerusalem has been redesignated and will report directly to Washington “on substantive matters”, indicating an upgrade in ties before a planned visit by the US president, Joe Biden.

What had been called the Palestinian Affairs Unit (PAU) was renamed the US Office of Palestinian Affairs (OPA) under the move. Before becoming the PAU, it had been the US consulate in Jerusalem and a focus of Palestinian statehood goals in the city.

Biden’s predecessor, Donald Trump, outraged Palestinians – and delighted many Israelis – by formally closing the consulate and redesignating it as the PAU within the US embassy that was moved to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv in 2018.

“The OPA operates under the auspices of the US embassy in Jerusalem, and reports on substantive matters directly to the near eastern affairs bureau in the state department,” a spokesperson for the mission said. “The name change was done to better align with state department nomenclature. The new OPA operating structure is designed to strengthen our diplomatic reporting and public diplomacy engagement.“

Palestinian officials had no immediate comment. They were due on Thursday to host state department envoy Hady Amr in Ramallah, their seat of government in the occupied West Bank.

Under the Trump-era redesignation, the former consulate’s staff and functions remained largely identical, but they were subordinate to the embassy rather than on a strict US-Palestinian bilateral track.

Palestinians want East Jerusalem as the capital of a future state and believed Trump’s embassy move undermined that aspiration. Israel, which captured East Jerusalem in 1967, calls Jerusalem its indivisible capital.

The Biden administration has promised to reopen the consulate, but Israel has said it would not consent to this and proposed that a consulate be opened in Ramallah instead.

Israel’s foreign ministry declined to comment on the latest redesignation of the Jerusalem mission.

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