President Biden meets King Abdullah II of Jordan, talks Al-Aqsa and 'stemming West Bank violence'
US President Joe Biden met with on Friday to discuss “urgent mechanisms to stem violence” in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.
The two leaders met in the wake ofIsrael's killing of Palestinian journalist earlier this week and a series of Israeli raids on the Al-Aqsa compound during and after theMuslim holy month of Ramadan.
"The leaders consulted on recent events in the region and discussed urgent mechanisms to stem violence, calm rhetoric and reduce tensions in Israel and the West Bank,"the said after the private meeting between the two leaders.
Washington called Jordan “a critical ally and force for stability in the Middle East".
"The President confirmed unwavering USsupport for Jordan and His Majesty’s leadership,” according to the White Housereadout.
King Abdullah II was in the US for the second time since Biden’s election in 2020, where he met with US lawmakers and top defence officials at the Pentagon. The monarch met US military officials last week to between the two countries.
The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan’s role as the custodian of Muslim holy places in Jerusalem also featured heavily in Friday's discussion, at a time whenthe Al-Aqsa Mosque has frequently .
Violent incursions into the Al-Aqsa compound by Israeli forces throughout Ramadan caused outrage in Palestine and beyond.
Palestinians consider Israel's repeated attacks on Al-Aqsa to be a provocation and part of a wider effort to transform the third-holiest site in Islam into a Jewish place of worship, in breach of the longstanding status-quo agreement there.
Relations between Jordan and Israel had improved since Naftali Bennett became prime minister last year, but Amman expressed anger over the raids on Al-Aqsa.
Abdullah appealed last month for "calm" between the two sides.