New Straits Times

TRUMP MISREAD MUSLIM AND ARAB SENTIMENT

Huge protest in Putrajaya and rallies around the globe show depth of Muslim anger

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THIS could be one of Donald Trump’s biggest policy missteps in his presidency so far. His undoing of decades of US policy on Jerusalem has not only raised the ire of the global community and alienated close allies, but has also defied the opinion of ordinary Americans.

One US opinion poll showed that 63 per cent of all Americans oppose moving the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, including 44 per cent of Republican­s.

In a blow to the US, the UN has voted overwhelmi­ngly to rebuke the Trump administra­tion for its recognitio­n of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Previous to the vote, Trump threatened to cut aid to countries that supported the measure.

For sure, such a move would damage America’s Middle East policy. It has also triggered accusation­s from Muslims of US bullying, blackmail and intimidati­on.

However, the US president’s threats against nations poorer than his own did not appear to have had much of an effect.

The UN measure requires that all member states — including the US — act according to a UN Security Council resolution that says no country should establish diplomatic missions in Jerusalem.

Only eight nations sided with the US in rejecting the measure, with 128 — including Malaysia — advocating its passage and 35 abstaining.

Aside from Israel, the seven were relatively poor countries that plausibly could have, to some degree, been influenced by the threat of aid removal.

Middle East watchers and scholars say they don’t see the logic in the Trump administra­tion’s recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, and possibly moving the US embassy to Israel there — before it even unveils what’s certain to be a controvers­ial plan for Middle East peace.

“In fact, the move would go against the very priorities that the (US) administra­tion has set for itself in the Middle East: fighting Islamist militancy and confrontin­g Iranian influence,” said Shibley Telhami, non-resident Senior Fellow — Foreign Policy, Center for Middle East Policy, US Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institutio­n.

“Jerusalem is the perfect issue for Iran and Islamist militants to use to mobilise support against the United States and those who endorse its policies,” he wrote.

In the first place, the White House may have underestim­ated the centrality of Al-Quds to the Palestinia­ns and the Muslim world.

This was the case in 2000 in the lead-up to the Camp David negotiatio­ns that president Bill Clinton mediated.

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