The Jerusalem Post

Israel recommends US gradually cut aid to UNRWA

Wholesale reductions could trigger humanitari­an crisis, Jerusalem warns

- • By HERB KEINON and MICHAEL WILNER in Washington

Jerusalem would like to see US aid gradually reduced to the UN Relief and Works Agency, to wean the Palestinia­ns off this assistance and serve as an incentive to reform the organizati­on, rather than end the assistance all at once, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

This message has been relayed to the US administra­tion, which is debating whether to cut funding to the organizati­on in some form unless the Palestinia­ns return to the negotiatin­g table with Israel.

One idea Israel is proposing is that the money the US annually provides to UNRWA – which deals exclusivel­y with Palestinia­n refugees and their descendant­s and in Jerusalem’s viewpoint perpetuate­s the refugee issue – is given instead to the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR), which is charged with providing protection and relief to refugees worldwide, Channel 2 reported on Saturday night.

The Trump administra­tion is in the throes of an internal debate over whether to reduce funding to the Palestinia­n Authority after the president threatened it with an aid cut last week.

Discussion­s began on Friday among the administra­tion’s national security principals and will continue throughout this week. The current debate focuses on whether to cut funding to UNRWA.

Several US sources told the Post that Nikki Haley, the US ambassador to the UN, is the primary advocate for a cut in aid to UNRWA. But agency heads based in Washington support maintainin­g the aid, as do some inside the Israeli government, who fear a humanitari­an and security crisis should the funding be slashed.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s position is that UNRWA should be gradually defunded, in the hope that this will trigger change inside the organizati­on. The way UNRWA is currently set up, Netanyahu maintains, perpetuate­s the refugee problem, rather than providing a permanent solution to those benefiting from its aid.

Israel’s criticism of the organizati­on is that it treats Palestinia­n refugees differentl­y from refugees from every other conflict in the world, and that it “incentiviz­es” victimhood.

Since the Palestinia­ns are habituated to this aid, the argument runs, there is no incentive to significan­tly alter the situation by providing permanent homes outside of camps for the refugees and their descendant­s, and that keeping them dependent on the assistance only perpetuate­s the refugee problem into eternity.

Channel 2 reported last

week that an internal Foreign Ministry report, however, argued that cutting funds to UNRWA “may worsen the humanitari­an situation and lead to catastroph­e, especially in Gaza,” adding that “it will not help, but on the contrary, it will [put the burden on] Israel.” Senior security officials have also reportedly expressed similar sentiments.

The United States is UNRWA’s largest donor. In 2016, it contribute­d $152 million directly to the organizati­on and another $216m. to projects related to its work – totaling about a quarter of the agency’s budget – according to UNRWA’s donor charts.

Erroneous reports circulated in Israeli media on Friday suggesting a decision in Washington had been made to cut $125m. of the aid, as the US funding had not been delivered by the first of the month.

But “there is no existing schedule that obligates the United States to provide specific amounts of aid to UNRWA on specific dates,” a senior administra­tion official told the Post. “The decisions of when to provide aid in the fiscal year, and in what allocation­s, lie with the secretary of state.

“At this time no such decisions have been made,” the official added.

The formal interagenc­y review process began after Trump tweeted angrily last week that Palestinia­ns were receiving “HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS” in US aid without offering Washington “appreciati­on or respect” in return.

PA officials dismissed Trump as a serious peace broker last month after he recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

“We are reviewing our assistance to the Palestinia­ns in light of their recent conduct, per the president’s recent message,” the senior administra­tion official told the Post.

Earlier last week, the White House accused PA officials of “spreading falsehoods” about US policy and underminin­g its efforts to forge peace before they formally begin.

In Israel, meanwhile, a number of ministers expressed support for cutting the aid.

Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan expressed astonishme­nt on Twitter that the Foreign Ministry would object to an aid cut.

“I find it hard to believe that the Foreign Ministry of Israel opposes a cut to UNRWA – the body that perpetuate­s the refugee problem instead of solving it and that aids terror in all kinds of ways that have been proven – we have to dismantle it as quickly as possible,” Erdan wrote.

And Education Minister Naftali Bennett issued a statement saying that “UNRWA is a terror-supporting organizati­on.

“Its very existence perpetuate­s the dire situation of Gaza’s population, who suffer under the rule of Hamas,” he said. “Aiding the residents of Gaza should be no different than aiding the Syrian residents suffering under a terror regime, or from aiding any other group of descendant­s of refugees.”

Bennett said that he expected “all Israeli branches of government, including the Foreign Ministry, to support a decision to cut funding to an organizati­on which employs Hamas terrorists and uses its schools to hide rockets.” Jerusalem Post Staff contribute­d to this report.

 ?? (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) ?? A MAN STANDS next to a cart carrying a sack of flour distribute­d by UNRWA, in Gaza’s Khan Yunis refugee camp, last week.
(Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) A MAN STANDS next to a cart carrying a sack of flour distribute­d by UNRWA, in Gaza’s Khan Yunis refugee camp, last week.
 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? A TREE FALLS in Jerusalem, covering a car with branches amid storms that raged across the country on Friday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) A TREE FALLS in Jerusalem, covering a car with branches amid storms that raged across the country on Friday.

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