The Jerusalem Post

America’s next ambassador to the UN

- • By SHMULEY BOTEACH

In a televised press conference last week, while she sat next to the president, US Ambassador the United Nations Nikki Haley announced her resignatio­n.

It’s hard to see her go.

Few American ambassador­s have so distinguis­hed themselves as champions of freedom. Both along the East River and across the world, Haley earned herself a formidable reputation as a tough and resolute defender of her country and its allies. She made immense progress in curbing UN bureaucrac­y, combating anti-Israel bias, and standing up to the internatio­nal body’s amorality in excusing brutal strongmen.

“We spoke out resolutely against dictatorsh­ips in Iran, Syria, Venezuela, Cuba, and yes, Russia,” she said in her brief parting address. It’s all true. If Haley’s arrival to the UN meant anything, it was this: The party’s over.

She led the charge to enforce sanctions against the brutal despotic regimes of North Korea and South Sudan despite repeated attempts by Russia and China to protect them. She blasted Iran for its perilous ballistic missile program and brazen support for terrorist elements. And perhaps most significan­tly, she was a vital component of the administra­tion’s courageous decision to remove our nation from the disastrous nuclear agreement signed with Iran that essentiall­y sent them down a wide-open highway to Destinatio­n: Atomic Bomb.

Most meaningful to me, Nikki Haley stood up for Israel and largely neutralize­d the UN’s perverse bias against its only Jewish member-state. Her dedication to America’s staunch allies in general, and the State of Israel in particular, was apparent from the start. Just moments after her very first Security Council meeting on the Middle East, she lambasted the UN for its incomprehe­nsible obsessions with Israel at a time when Hezbollah was building mass arsenals in Lebanon, and ISIS and the Assad regime were laying waste to Syria, leaving hundreds of thousands dead in their wake.

And of course, none can forget the courage in defending our president’s bold decision to move the American Embassy to Jerusalem, even as 128 countries used their platform at the UN to again attack Israel and show their disapprova­l and contempt for thousands of years of Jewish connection, hope and longing.

Amid blistering opposition, Haley pushed forth with her signature class and unmistakab­le dignity. It’s no wonder that 63% of Americans approved of her performanc­e, an astonishin­g number considerin­g today’s hyper-partisan climate.

Speaking for nearly 30 minutes to express his gratitude and appreciati­on for the parting ambassador, our president said it best: “We will miss you.”

With Haley’s sudden resignatio­n, however, we are left with a tough, yet crucial question of who can possibly live up to her stellar record.

The thought of Ivanka Trump taking over the American seat at the UN was heard in the corridors of Washington. She, like Haley, is a remarkably strong and capable woman of both refinement and bearing. She would in all probabilit­y do an exceptiona­l job, especially given that the pivotal prerequisi­tes of the job are to represent America with strength and determinat­ion and to have the president’s ear. Few have qualities quite like those of Ivanka. President Trump, however, said that if he nominated her he’d be accused of nepotism. So that option is off the table.

That brings me to the person I believe would best serve the United States as its ambassador to the United Nations.

My advice? There is none better than the assistant to the president and special representa­tive for internatio­nal negotiatio­ns – in which role he serves under Jared Kushner – as the President’s chief Middle East negotiator Jason’s Greenblatt.

JASON IS a friend of mine. That my opinion of his character is gleaned not only from the headlines but from real experience. Jason is a truly principled, God-fearing man with a genuine humility, a deep moral center and an outstandin­g command of internatio­nal diplomacy. In his role interfacin­g between the Gulf states, the Palestinia­ns, Israel and the United States, he has earned the respect of all parties involved and has the strong and fervent backing of the American pro-Israel community, both Jewish and Evangelica­l Christian.

Most importantl­y, he is dedicated in heart, body and soul to the American values of freedom, democracy and the defense of liberty.

In Ethics of our Fathers, perhaps the greatest treasury of Jewish wisdom, the leading sage Rabbi Shimon is recorded as saying, “There are three crowns: the crown of Torah, the crown of priesthood and the crown of sovereignt­y.” He then explains, “The crown of a good name surmounts them all.”

Which brings me back to back to Jason. Beyond having a good heart, a warm and engaging dispositio­n, and a razor-sharp intellect, Jason is held in the highest regard by all who know him, whether in a personal or diplomatic context. As one of the top diplomats in the center the most flammable region on earth, that’s nothing to sneeze at.

Consider this: The relationsh­ip between the United States and the Palestinia­n Authority has never been worse. America is hardly to blame. In light of the PA’s refusal to stop paying terrorists with American aid money, or its opposition to even entering peace talks, Palestinia­n leaders have no one but themselves to blame for the crumbling relationsh­ip. The Palestinia­ns haven’t done much to hide their contempt for this administra­tion. They’ve called the Trump policies “provocativ­e,” “illegitima­te” and “illegal.” PA President Mahmoud Abbas took things even further, calling US Ambassador to the Israel David Friedman and Nikki Haley “insult[s] to an administra­tion that respects itself – if it wants to respect itself.” Interestin­gly – if not shockingly – they’ve shown nothing but respect for Jason Greenblatt, even as he’s pushed the same agenda and policies as his contempora­ries. THERE IS a reason: Jason is a masterful listener and comports himself with humility and graciousne­ss at all times. In comparison to Haley’s tough-as-nails approach, some might see this as weakness. Precisely the opposite is true. Jason is capable of being deeply respectful, even toward political and ideologica­l antagonist­s, precisely because he is so strongly anchored in his immovable moral conviction­s.

Ultimately, after the considerab­le progress made under Haley, this might be exactly what we need: an ambassador who can consolidat­e Haley’s considerab­le progress and who can now build a consensus of allies to rally around the Trump administra­tion’s insistence that the UN must reform.

Having someone like Jason, who served as Trump’s chief legal officer for two decades and who has the president’s respect – and ear – is pivotal.

Nikki Haley’s unpreceden­ted gains were something of a flash offensive. In less than two years, she helped President Trump push an incredibly ambitious agenda that included reining in North Korea, crippling the Iran deal, and making good on a promise to the American Jewish community of standing up for Israel at the UN, a promise that for decades had been ignored by the United States.

Perhaps in the wake of America’s sweeping diplomatic offensive at the UN, we ought not to seek to merely replicate the warriors who brought us these successes and instead introduce someone whose immovable personal conviction­s were entrench them.

Jason is a man who can consolidat­e those gains by bringing the nations of the world to accept the promising changes enacted by this administra­tion. The United States needs to construct a unified alliance to help reign in the rogue states which Haley finally took on. To do so, they’ll need someone who speaks not only from moral indignatio­n, but from an deep and experience­d sense of consensus-building, rallying America’s allies to continue to advance American values at an internatio­nal forum that has done anything but respect them.

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, ‘America’s Rabbi,’ whom The Washington Post calls ‘the most famous Rabbi in America,’ is the internatio­nal bestsellin­g author of 30 books, including his most recent, The Israel Warrior. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmul­ey.

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