Posted on 12/25/2017 3:28:07 PM PST by nickcarraway
On December 6, Donald Trump opened the gates of hell and set the Middle East aflame by acknowledging Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, or at least thats what various prophets and practitioners of doom predicted.
The reality was somewhat different. While violent demonstrations in the West Bank and Gaza, and in various Muslim and European countries, followed Palestinian Authority and Hamas calls for days of rage, these were hardly of the magnitude expected. Indeed, Jerusalem itself was relatively quiet. The diplomatic storm from the Arab world also was less intense than predicted.
This unexpectedly mild reaction was due to the actual content of the statement itself and to the changing state of international affairs, particularly priorities in the Arab world.
The US Presidents announcement was measured and nuanced. While confirming the obvious that Jerusalem, where Israels parliament, Supreme Court, government ministries and the residences of its prime minister and president have all been since 1950, is Israels capital he made it clear that he wasnt pre-empting its final boundaries or precluding a Palestinian capital in the citys east, or a two-state outcome, and also that he respected the importance of the city to Christianity and Islam.
Riots in the West Bank and Gaza resulted in six demonstrators being killed, a guard being stabbed in a Jerusalem bus station and about 20 rockets being fired at Israel from Gaza, with Israel targeting Hamas facilities in response. However, it would have been much worse if Hamas and the Palestinian Authority had mobilised their own forces.
Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas is likely concerned that instability caused by widespread violence may ultimately lead to a Hamas takeover in the West Bank, something Israeli security has helped him prevent until now. For Palestinian residents of the West Bank and east Jerusalem, life is sufficiently comfortable to make risking current living conditions by staging another intifada undesirable. They are cynical about their president, now in the 12th year of his four-year term, and may well doubt his disproved claims that Jerusalem is under threat from Trumps symbolic move, which actually changes nothing on the ground.
Abbass reaction has been disappointing. His initial statement deemed Trumps stance to be the end of negotiations, and whitewashed any Jewish connection to Jerusalem, describing it as an Arab Christian and Arab Muslim city, the capital of the eternal state of Palestine.
At the Organisation of Islamic Co-operation summit on December 13, possibly miffed by the lack of support domestically and internationally, he descended into outright anti-Semitism, accusing Jews of being really excellent in faking and counterfeiting history and religion. If Abbas cant even bring himself to accept the Jewish connection to Jerusalem and Israel, it casts real doubt over whether he will ever be prepared to negotiate peace.
Internationally, the harshest reactions came from Turkey and Iran significantly non-Arab countries which both seek hegemony over the Middle East. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sees himself as a successor to the Ottoman emperors, and attacking Israel as a way to attract support from the Arab street.
Iran, which continually calls for Israels destruction, uses even less subtle means, such as fomenting terror and rebellion, to spread its fundamentalist revolution.
While Erdogan convened the OIC summit to condemn Trumps announcement, notably the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates chose not to attend, with the Saudis sending only a junior minister. Attendance from Muslim countries in Africa and central Asia was similarly patchy. Significantly, the summit, while recognising east Jerusalem as Palestines capital, also effectively implied the OIC accepts Israels capital will be in the citys west.
The muted reaction of the Saudis and their allies demonstrates changing Middle East realities. Still concerned for the Palestinians, other issues such as the aftermath of the so-called Arab Spring, the civil wars in Syria and Yemen, terrorism and domestic issues in their own countries have become higher priorities.
They, together with much of the Islamic world, may be tiring of Palestinian histrionics and ongoing rejectionism. The old insistence that the Israeli-Palestinian issue is the core of the Middle Easts problems, always dubious, is looking ridiculous in light of events in Syria, Yemen, Egypt, Iraq and elsewhere.
Most important, the Arab world now regards expansionist Iran as a far greater worry than Israel, and for some time has been working covertly with Jerusalem as an effective ally to contain Irans threatening activities.
The December 17 resolution at the UN Security Council expressing deep regret at recent decisions and calling void any actions that alter the status of Jerusalem was defeated by the US veto. The passage of a similar motion through the UN General Assembly on December 21 (on which Australia advisedly at least abstained) has no legal effect. In fact, demonstrating the farcical nature of the UN, it was this years 21st motion on Israel, and while immoderate was actually less extreme than others, some of which have implicitly denied the Jewish connection to Jerusalem.
Trump rightly noted that many years of denying Israels claim to Jerusalem have achieved nothing for peace. The Palestinian leaders rejected generous offers of statehood with east Jerusalem as their capital in 2000, 2001 and 2008. Since 2014, they have refused to negotiate at all. Now, instead of taking advantage of the favourable possibilities in Trumps announcement and pursuing dialogue, they have turned again to intransigence.
Experience amply demonstrates that the path to Middle East peace does not lie through appeasing Palestinian threats, colluding with or ignoring UN bias against Israel and refusing Israel the rights of any other country, such as choosing its own capital. The international community must stop denying reality just to cater to Palestinian sensibilities, and make clear the Palestinian Authority will achieve its state only if it is genuinely prepared to negotiate and compromise, and accept Israels existence. Acknowledging Jerusalems true status, like the US has, would be a good start.
Colin Rubenstein is executive director of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council.
Palestinians were predominantly Christian and lived in the Country called Jordan. After fomenting insurrection and trying to pull a revolution of in Jordan, Jordan kicked them out and gave them the West Bank, they were lead by Yasser Arafat who converted to Muslim to get support from Arab Muslims.
That’s how it plays out in my head.
What? Are you saying that they are all millennials, educated in the United States
Jerusalem was the capital of Jews long before any any of the current countries in the world even existed, and long before even any Muslim ever existed.
set the Middle East aflame
Let the damned thing burn then.
Well said....sounds exactly correct to me. My yrs in the ME showed me to expect anything.
Post of the day award!
1 Chronicles 23:25 For David said, The LORD God of Israel hath given rest unto his people, that they may dwell in Jerusalem for ever.
I’m very optimistic about what’s happening in the Middle East. We could see one hell of a cultural shift in a fairly short amount of time. Salman appears to be an effective driving force and Trump is playing along instead of seizing control and screwing it up in order to look like he’s “doing something.”
I spent about 6 years in the ME. On the street and behind closed doors there is no love for the Palestinian. Generally viewed as troublemakers and used as pawns.. That was from Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and Egypt..
>>Riots in the West Bank and Gaza resulted in . . . about 20 rockets being fired at Israel from Gaza,
So in other words, Thursday.
>>Riots in the West Bank and Gaza resulted in . . . about 20 rockets being fired at Israel from Gaza,
>So in other words, Thursday.
Even on liberal reddit that was the reaction to the rioting. No one gives a damn about the Palirats.
educated Muslims realize that the Fakestinian claims are all lies. and the Fakestinians cost Muslims a great deal... of money, lost respect and credibility all around the world.
AND...any Muslim who’s read his or her Koran knows that Allah has given the Promised Land (all of it) to the Jewish People.
The Egyptians have an even lower opinion of them.
I had heard they were mainly from Jordan and the Jordanians don’t want them back either.
Yep....spent a few yrs there too.
They did not end up in what the Arabs considered the back end of beyond because they were highly successful members of the community.
At best they were dirt farmers at worse outright criminals that no one was interested enough to chase down.
Why should that be Israel's problem?
The stupid ones listened to their fellow Arabs who told them to leave, that they would squash Israel, kill all the Jews and they could move back in and get all the loot.
Didn't quite work out as planed.
So there they were, out of their homes, across the border and Israel was not going to let them back in. They had openly declared themselves enemies.
The nations that attacked Israel suddenly found these undesirables parked on their doorstep permanently. They didn't like it much.
So they passed laws that "Palestinians" could not own property or open businesses or do a bunch of other things to encourage them to "push the Jews into the sea".
And here we are.
It was a bit more complicated then that but not much.
O-kay.
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