Washington announced that it is making efforts with the parties of the Quartet and the Security Council to resume peace negotiations between Palestine and Israel.

"We want to make sure that the Palestinians and the Israelis realize that the vision of peace (the so-called century deal) is realistic and actionable and meets the basic requirements of the two peoples," US Permanent Representative to the United Nations Kelly Kraft said in press statements.

The Quartet was formed in 2002 and includes the United States, the European Union, the United Nations and Russia.

On January 28, 2019, US President Donald Trump presented the alleged peace plan, which included items that significantly diminished Palestinian rights.

The plan includes the establishment of a Palestinian state in the form of an archipelago connected by bridges and tunnels, making Jerusalem the undivided capital of Israel, and the Jordan Valley under Tel Aviv control.

In response to the Israeli efforts to annex lands in the West Bank according to the American deal, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas announced about two weeks ago that the Palestinian leadership and the PLO are in a solution of the agreements and understandings signed with Israel, as well as stopping security coordination.

The decision of the Palestinian leadership includes - according to the statements of Palestinian officials - all of the implications of the Oslo agreement, including the economic agreement under which goods pass through to the Palestinian areas from the Israeli ports.

Palestinian estimates indicate that the Israeli annexation will reach more than 30% of the area of ​​the West Bank.

The Oslo Agreement concluded in 1993 is the most prominent between the PLO and Israel, but there are many agreements and treaties that preceded it, and others that followed or were built on it, whether political, economic or security.