In rapid succession, in its final months in office, the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump negotiated agreements establishing diplomatic relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and, finally, Morocco. Though the Abraham Accords—as the Arab-Israeli normalization deals were grandiosely titled—were touted as historic steps toward ending the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, they were brokered without any Palestinian involvement. With their focus on delaying Israel’s plans to formally annex Palestinian territory, the deals implicitly legitimized Israel’s expanding occupation of the West Bank, in flagrant violation of international law. According to an internal U.S. State Department memo that was first reported by The National, an Abu Dhabi–based daily, on March 17, President Joe Biden’s administration is devising plans to rebuild Washington’s relationship with the Palestinian Authority and resuscitate negotiations toward a two-state solution. The draft memo, “The U.S.-Palestinian Reset and the Path Forward,” laid out efforts to provide $15 million in pandemic aid to Palestinians and to take a firmer stand against Israeli settlement activities.