Jerusalem: The world's opinion on the city

Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas said Tuesday US President Donald Trump had informed him he intended to move the country's embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
If
he does so and recognizes the holy city as Israel's capital, Trump will
break with decades of US policy and international consensus on the
city.
Here are the positions of world powers on the issue:
History
In 1947, the United Nations devised a plan
to divide British mandate Palestine into three entities: a Jewish state,
an Arab state and Jerusalem, which would have a unique status as an
internationally controlled city.
Jewish leaders accepted the plan, but the Arab world rejected it.
Following
the British withdrawal the next year, a war broke out in which Israel
seized the west of the city, while Jordanians and Palestinians took the
east.
In the next conflict in 1967 Israel
seized control of east Jerusalem and later annexed it, in moves never
recognized by the international community.
The
predominantly Palestinian population in the east lives under full
Israeli control, but cannot vote in parliamentary elections.
Israeli, Palestinian views
Israel
views the city as its undivided capital, with a Tuesday statement
saying the city "is the capital of the Jewish people for 3,000 years and
Israel's capital since 70 years."
The internationally recognized Palestinian government sees the eastern part as the capital of their future state.
Islamist movement Hamas, which controls Gaza and does not recognize Israel, calls Jerusalem the Palestinian capital.
United States
In
1995, the US Congress passed the Jerusalem Embassy Act calling on the
United States to move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem,
recognizing it as Israel's capital.
The
law is binding on the US government but a clause allowed presidents to
postpone its application for six months on "national security
interests".
Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama re-ratified the clause every six months.
Trump reluctantly renewed it for the first time in June 2017, despite promising during his campaign to move the embassy.
But six months on, his decision is due.
International community
The position of the majority of the international community has been largely unchanged for decades.
Essentially Jerusalem is viewed as an issue for final status negotiations between the two sides.
United
Nations statements suggest, however, that the city could remain the
capital of both Israel and a future Palestinian state in any deal.
The vast majority of countries have largely followed this line.
All
embassies are based in the commercial capital Tel Aviv, but most
countries simply do not specify what they consider to be Israel's
capital.
Thirteen countries did have embassies in Jerusalem until 1980, however, when a UN resolution called upon them to remove them.
Bolivia,
Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Haiti, the Netherlands, Panama, Uruguay and Venezuela then shifted their embassies.
Russia
Earlier
this year Israeli media trumpeted a Russian government statement that
for the first time specifically said "we view West Jerusalem as the
capital of Israel".
This appeared to be a
shift in policy position and was hailed by some Israeli politicians,
though it had little practical implication.
The statement also recognized "east Jerusalem as the capital of the future Palestinian state"
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