Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas was one of the first Arab leaders to congratulate Donald Trump on his election win on Wednesday, but analysts say a Trump presidency may be profoundly negative for Palestinian aspirations while buoying Israel's confidence.
Israel's right-wing prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, expressed confidence that he and Trump could work together to bring US-Israeli relations to "new heights" and his office later said that Trump, in a phone conversation, had invited him to a meeting in the United States "at the first opportunity".
Abbas appeared to hold out some hope that Trump, with no clear foreign policy programme, may turn a new leaf when it comes to the Middle East, a statement said.
"Abbas congratulates the US President Donald Trump on his election and hopes just peace can be achieved during his tenure," said the statement on the official WAFA news agency.
That may be wishful thinking.
During the campaign, Trump won support in Israel with a promise to move the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, all but enshrining the ancient city as Israel's capital.
While that has been promised many times by presidential candidates in the past, Trump is the sort of leader who may well make it happen, and he would likely have full backing from the Republican-dominated US Congress, too.
If it does occur, it would override decades of international diplomacy that holds that the status of Jerusalem is not finalized until a negotiated settlement is reached between Israel and the Palestinians, who want East Jerusalem as the capital of their state, together with the West Bank and Gaza.
Netanyahu, who has had a rocky relationship with President Barack Obama, issued a statement congratulating Trump and hailed him as a "true friend" of Israel.
"I am confident that President-elect Trump and I will continue to strengthen the unique alliance between our two countries and bring it to ever greater heights," Netanyahu said.
The phone conversation the two held was "hearty and warm" and regional issues were discussed, Netanyahu's office said, adding that: "The Prime Minister ... told (Trump) that the United States has no better ally than Israel."
US-backed peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians collapsed in 2014.
Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett, a right-wing party leader who backs Israeli settlement building and opposes a Palestinian state, made the implications of Trump's win very clear in a rapidly released statement.
"The era of a Palestinian state is over," Bennett said.

Trump’s promise to move embassy to Jerusalem rattles Palestinians
A Palestinian man reads the Al-Quds newspaper depicting images newly elected U.S. President Donald Trump and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in Jerusalem's Old City Nov. 9, 2016. (Reuters)
Reuters
Thursday 10 November 2016
Last Update: Tuesday, 19 May 2020 KSA 12:36 - GMT 09:36
DAY | WEEK |
-
6998 Views Coronavirus cases in the UAE surge as authorities detect 3,407 new infections
-
3551 Views WhatsApp says no one will have their account suspended or deleted on February 8
-
2579 Views France, Britain, Germany warn Iran against uranium metal work
-
2036 Views Indonesia earthquake: Damaged roads, lack of gear hinder search rescue
-
1883 Views Coronavirus: UAE records 3,432 new COVID-19 cases, death toll rises by 7
-
1364 Views Roadside bomb kills two policemen in Afghanistan: Officials
-
21994 Views Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince reveals project ‘THE LINE’ in futuristic city of NEOM
-
14216 Views Musk urged followers to ‘use Signal,’ sends unrelated stock with similar name flying
-
11796 Views Oman Sultan issues new law organizing succession, naming of crown prince
-
9651 Views Coronavirus: UAE reports 3,362 new COVID-19 cases, total hits 239,587
-
7619 Views COVID-19: Saudi Arabia warns against travel to 12 countries without permission
-
6998 Views Coronavirus cases in the UAE surge as authorities detect 3,407 new infections
SHOW MORE