President Trump met with King Abdullah II of Jordan att the White House Wednesday as a report revealed that the administration wants to host a Mideast summit between Israel and the Palestinians as soon as this summer.

The two leaders, Trump said, would “advance the cause of peace in the Middle East, including peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians, and I’m working very, very hard when trying to finally create peace between the Palestinians and Israel.”

The president also praised Jordan, a US ally, for joining the fight against ISIS.

The Jordanian king returned the praise and said he was hopeful that the Trump administration could get action in solving the Middle East’s many problems.

“I think your message is a message of hope,” Abdullah said.

The meeting followed a White House sitdown on Monday between Trump and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Si​s​si during which they discussed holding the summit in Washington, the London-based Arab newspaper Al-Hayat reported​​.

“I know your importance and the centrality of your regional role, and I want to cooperate and work together,” the newspaper reported Trump t​elling​ el-Si​s​si, citing sources.

Trump added that he would take a “completely different” approach than his predecessor in seeking a peace agreement.

Trump, according to the source, told el-Si​s​si that Barack Obama saw Egypt as being “part of the problem,” while ​he​ himself viewed “it as part of the solution.”

​Quoting Alaa Yousef, a spokesman for el-Sissi, the report said the Egyptian leader stressed the important role America would play in reviving the peace process between the Palestinian​s​ and ​the ​Israeli​s​.

The two leaders agreed to “activate the mechanism of strategic dialogue between the two countries in order to promote mutual understanding and develop cooperation in all fields,” ​Yousef​ told the newspaper.

Jason Greenblatt, Trump’s special representative for international negotiations, raised the idea of reviving peace talks to other Arab leaders last week, and the matter came up again when Trump met with Abdullah. ​

Leaders at the annual Arab League summit last week in Jordan reached an agreement on recognizing Israel in exchange for a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem.

With the agreement to back his case, Abdullah told Trump that Arab leaders are serious about achieving what Jordan’s foreign minister, Ayman Safadi, described as the “historic reconciliation between Israel and the whole Arab world,” USA Today reported.

The president did not reveal his goals for such a summit.

Previously, Trump said he would favor either a one-state or two-state solution as long as both sides agreed.

With Wire Services