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Imagine that a new president were elected in the United States and decided to appoint a mediator to the Middle East named Jonathan Ibrahim. Ibrahim would come to Israel often in pursuit of peace, and would meet regularly with Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.Now imagine that during his periodic trips here, he would regularly go to the Old City of Jerusalem to pray at the al-Aksa Mosque on the Temple Mount. Imagine that this mediator came here during the recent crisis surrounding the Temple Mount and tweeted a photo of himself praying at al-Aksa with the following text: “A difficult two weeks have brought me to al-Aksa again. I pray for lasting peace in this special place and across the region.”How would you feel? Would you perceive the mediator as being balanced? Or would you consider him biased to the Palestinian narrative?I mention this since it is important to understand how the Palestinians perceive Jason Greenblatt, President Trump’s envoy to the region. Greenblatt regularly comes to Israel, and regularly prays at the Western Wall. And he did tweet the above text last week – except instead of al-Aksa, it said Kotel.A few days later, Greenblatt tweeted a video about Tisha Be’av made by StandWithUs, an amazing and effective organization that fights for Israel on the front lines of the narrative battle. It is a pro-Israel advocacy, public diplomacy organization, not a religious one, set up to counter Palestinian incitement and propaganda. Tweeting out their video has political significance.The Palestinians are paying attention to all of this. They noticed Greenblatt’s visits to the Kotel during the Temple Mount crisis, but for the most part have remained quiet. In general, the feeling in Ramallah is that Greenblatt is anything but impartial when it comes to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.The same feeling applies to Jared Kushner, whose own voice was heard this week in a leaked recording published on Wired, in which the president’s son-in-law and top adviser said that the administration supports the installation of metal detectors.The question that remains unanswered is whether this is all part of the White House’s grand strategy, or these are simply rookie mistakes. If they are mistakes, then they will be difficult to repair.For decades, America has worked hard to appear impartial when it came to the conflict. Being impartial is what helped it broker peace between Israel, Egypt and Jordan, and what conferred status as the lead negotiator in all of the talks that have been held since the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993. Loss of impartiality will make negotiations more difficult to renew.On the other hand, this might be part of a larger policy shift meant to send the Palestinians a message that America is indeed biased and stands with Israel. If that is what is happening, then we should welcome it, especially after eight years with the Obama administration which seemed to be solely focused on Israeli violations and the settlement issue. This new approach - if that’s what it is - might actually work by cornering the Palestinians and pressuring them to ease up on some of their outrageous demands.Whatever the answer, it might no longer really matter. As Kushner said in the recording, there might not even be a solution to this historic conflict. He also admitted that after studying the issue, he has yet to come up with unique ideas for how to get the ball rolling.Either way, I commend Kushner for his honesty. That is a step in the right direction.