Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica’s stance on Jerusalem disappoint­ing, says Garnett Roper

- Garnett Roper GUEST COLUMNIST Garnett Roper is president of the Jamaica Theologica­l Seminary. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com

UNITED STATES (US) President Donald Trump made a declaratio­n that America regards Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. It is ironic that this has been the position of the US government since 1995 and that Trump made his declaratio­n on the same day that he signed a waiver postponing the move of the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Every US President since the 1995 declaratio­n has signed the waiver, yet Trump’s declaratio­n has set the cat among the pigeons. It has had a disruptive effect.

The United Nations (UN) passed a non-binding resolution by 128 to nine with 35 abstention­s. The resolution rejected the unilateral declaratio­n by the US and restated the UN commitment to a two-state resolution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. Jamaica’s abstention on that resolution is ominous. On the face of it, Jamaica appears to have abandoned foreign policy based on principle, to have resiled from its longstandi­ng support for the twostate solution, or, as it did in the Organisati­on of American States vote on Venezuela, appeared to be reading the tea leaves as it pertains to the return of US gunboat diplomacy.

The US has indicated that in response to the UN vote, it will further defund the UN by withdrawin­g U$285 million of pledged funding support for the organisati­on.

In the light of all of this, where ought thinking people to take their stand on this matter of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel? What principles ought to govern Jamaica’s foreign policy on the Middle East? How ought Jamaica to navigate the new environmen­t of might rather than right, which is appearing as the basis of the forays in the internatio­nal environmen­t by the US?

To begin with, Jerusalem is both myth and metaphor and the flash point of imperial hegemonic manoeuvres. There is a Palestinia­n map that locates Palestine with its centre in Jerusalem as the central bridge that links the continents of Africa to the South, Asia to the East, and Europe to the North.

Jerusalem is a metaphor used in the Bible of the new creation and of the ultimate renewal of human society: “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifull­y dressed for her husband”.

For the last century and a half, the imperial rulers of the world, Britain first and now the USA, have recruited sections of the emerging faith community (Christian Brethren, SeventhDay Adventist, and Pentecosta­lism, among others of the new line of churches founded in the 19th century) to develop a reading strategy called Dispensati­onalism that, in turn, supports millenaria­nism. It is a way of reading the Bible that privileges Israel and gives legitimacy to the imperial narrative that connects the fate of the ancient city of Jerusalem to the end of history. This is what is called imperial theology. In this way, both Britain and America have found cover for the injustices done to the people of Palestine, while they control the wealth and resources (especially oil) of the world it calls the Middle East. Middle East is a name that arises out of a Euro-centric view of the world. It is middle of where and east of what?

There can be no doubt that the instabilit­y in the Palestinia­n and Arab world furthers the hegemonic interest of the North Atlantic. In the meantime, there are five million Palestinia­n living as refugees, and the 360 square miles that constitute­s Gaza is the world’s largest open-air prison. There are 552 Israeli check-points in the West Bank. Israel controls 80 per cent of the water of Palestine. A Palestinia­n in Gaza cannot visit a relative in the West Bank, though they live in the same country.

Historical­ly, particular­ly because of the United Nations, the search for peace in the Middle East has concluded that the most sustainabl­e option that seeks to do justice both to Israel and the Palestinia­n people has been what is called the twostates solution. This solution allows the Palestinia­ns to occupy East Jerusalem and would see an end to the Israelis building new settlement­s in Gaza and in the West Bank. Jamaica, up to now, has been consistent­ly a reliable player where this internatio­nal doctrine is concerned. One has even been forced to wonder, based on certain actions recently, if Jamaica is locating itself alongside reactionar­y forces in the internatio­nal arena. Does Jamaica retain the right to make up its own mind on foreign affairs matters, or will we allow fear of or alignment with the position of the United States of America (USA) on matters as the basis of our action. Is there such a thing as non-alignment in internatio­nal affairs?

LOYALTY REQUIRED

There is no doubt that any reading of the USA under Donald Trump indicates that loyalty is required by the USA even in the exercise of one’s sovereign freedom. Niki Haley has tweeted and Donald Trump has obliged by inviting both those who voted against the UN resolution and those who abstained to be the guests of the president at the White House. This US President has been more willing to issue threats to dissenting voices and shout the praise of those who are deemed loyal than any other president since the second half of the 20th century.

Jamaica has taken a pragmatic and expedient approach on the matter of Jerusalem — nothing to do with principle. Rest assured that that is not a safe position to take. Jamaica is a small sovereign state. Its best hope is in a world where all voices contend at the table, not one in which the big metropoles have their say and the rest of us toe the line. When the US policy turned against Venezuela we said nothing. When, as a consequenc­e, it was against St Vincent and the Grenadines, Jamaica said nothing. Now that the US has acted against the interest of the Palestinia­n people, we had nothing to say. Who will speak up when the US or others like them act against us?

Jamaica is a small sovereign state; its best hope is in a world where all voices contend at the table, not one in which the big metropoles have their say and the rest of us toe the line.

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