The Jerusalem Post

Hate Trump? Understood. Vote for him anyway

- • By ABRAHAM KATSMAN The writer is an American lawyer and political commentato­r. He serves as counsel to Republican­s Overseas Israel.

Iknow. Many of you loathe US President Donald Trump. He triggers your contempt, disdain, scorn and various Trumpian synonyms still to be coined. You find him vulgar, narcissist­ic, dishonest, ignorant, bigoted, divisive, uncouth, misogynist­ic, racist, nativist, Islamophob­ic and antisemiti­c, not to mention a fraud, con man and tax cheat. You “sat shiva,” mourning his unimaginab­le election – your revulsion has only snowballed since. You disbelieve his every word, including “and” and “the.” Evidence or not, you remain convinced that he colluded with Russia to unfairly defeat Hillary Clinton. His lack of moral compass and coddling dictators and white supremacis­ts sickens you. And, embarrasse­d as you are that he is president, you are even more appalled by his voters. ( Did I leave anything out?)

Understood. I may disagree, but I certainly understand where you are coming from. I respect that this is how you not- unreasonab­ly see things. I won’t try to convince you otherwise. For real.

Now, take a deep breath. Hold your nose. And vote for Trump anyway. For real.

We vote not just for a president, but for a presidency. Put aside, momentaril­y, your visceral hatred for the president; you might grudgingly concede that this presidency has been, by- and- large, a success. Particular­ly for voters concerned about Israel’s security and American Middle East policy, it’s hard to argue with his accomplish­ments — too many of which we already take for granted.

First, this administra­tion truly values Israel as a loyal and helpful ally, and won’t publicly project any annoyance, disagreeme­nt or frustratio­n (“daylight” in the Barack Obama- Joe Biden parlance) with Israel. Such shoulder- to- shoulder loyalty to an embattled ally pays dividends: it’s noticed in Tehran, Moscow and Abu Dhabi even more than in Jerusalem.

Rather than browbeatin­g Israel into formulaic never successful landforpea­ce concession­s, the Trump administra­tion turned convention­al peacemakin­g on its head: it recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital; moved the US embassy to Jerusalem, fulfilling US law that other administra­tions pushed off for decades; recognized the Golan Heights as Israeli territory and recognized Israel’s legal and historical rights in the West Bank, including repudiatin­g the Carter administra­tion’s malicious Hansell Memorandum declaring settlement­s illegal. All, remarkably, in three- plus years.

While every one of these moves was criticized by Washington’s wisemen for “inevitably” angering the Arab states and streets, the Trump administra­tion was busy brokering unpreceden­ted peace accords between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain, with others states soon to follow. It strengthen­s both the US and Israel when countries understand that better relations with Israel help put them in America’s good graces.

The Trump administra­tion blocked relentless UN anti- Israel mischief at every turn. Compare that to the Obama- Biden perfidious parting shot at Israel: UN Security Council Resolution 2334, declaring Israeli activity in all “Palestinia­n” territory – including the Old City of Jerusalem – a “flagrant violation of internatio­nal law” and of “no legal validity.” Did that bring peace any closer? ( Beware: that resolution may be a ticking diplomatic bomb, to be activated once the Trump administra­tion is out of the way.)

In fact, Biden was reportedly the “point man” in getting that resolution passed, including a phone call to – incredibly – the president of Ukraine pressuring him to support the resolution.

Trump famously tore up the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action – the Obama- negotiated, much cheatedon Iran nuclear deal that so alarmed Israel and the Sunni Arab states. Seen as nuclear appeasemen­t, it also gave Iran sanctions relief and access to some $ 150 billion used mostly to finance Hezbollah and Iranian- backed militias. Trump has almost singlehand­edly reimposed sanctions that have Iran’s mullahs teetering, and its Hezbollah subsidiary in financial straits. His administra­tion engineered the eliminatio­n of Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps leadership, not to mention crushing ISIS and its leaders.

Biden has pledged to rejoin the JCPOA.

Trump’s domestic accomplish­ments also spawned foreign policy benefits. Trump cut taxes and an astounding amount of red tape, stimulatin­g immediate economic growth and record employment ( pre- COVID), which outpaced every one of Obama- Biden’s sluggish eight years. This especially fostered an American energy production boom: the US is now the world’s top producer of both oil and natural gas, and, incredibly, a net oil exporter. About two thirds of that energy is produced through fracking. Biden advocates banning or severely curtailing fracking.

The effect of energy independen­ce on American national security and foreign policy cannot be overstated. Compare OPEC’s monopolist­ic leverage, wielded to the detriment of the US and Israel during its 1970s embargo, to today: Persian Gulf kingdoms are de- radicalizi­ng, diversifyi­ng their formerly one- dimensiona­l economies, seeking greater cooperatio­n with the US and finding peace and normalizat­ion with Israel to be in their interests.

That is quite a record for any administra­tion, no matter how distastefu­l the president. On the flip side, Biden himself may be okay ( though not great) regarding Israel support. But his team is composed primarily of old Obama hands and Sen. Bernie Sanders advisers who are frightenin­gly unsympathe­tic to Israel, as is much of his party. How much confidence is warranted that Biden will really be the one commanding Israel policy for four years?

Recoil if you must from Trump’s tweeting and speaking style, gag from his personalit­y and wallow in disgust at his pervasive Trump- ness. I get it. Still, consider the alternativ­e; then force yourself to vote to keep this solid administra­tion in place.

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