Oman Daily Observer

Bolsonaro’s Israel embassy move invites high risks

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RIO DE JANEIRO: In announcing his intention to move Brazil’s embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, President-elect Jair Bolsonaro may please his evangelica­l support base, but would break with a half century of diplomacy.

In following the lead of his US counterpar­t Donald Trump, the incoming president of would not only isolate the country diplomatic­ally but also run the risk of provoking commercial retaliatio­n from Arab states, some of which are major importers of Brazilian meat.

“Brazil has been supporting a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine for more than 50 years and this decision could throw all those efforts into the bin,” said Guilherme Casaroes, a political science professor at the Getulio Vargas Foundation think-tank.

Israel’s annexation of east Jerusalem following the 1967 Six-day War with Egypt, Syria and Jordan, has never been internatio­nally recognised.

The United Nations maintains an ambiguous position over any eventual final status for the sacred city — cherished by the three major Abrahamic religions — but a 1947 resolution says it should become a “corpus separatum,” run independen­tly of either Israel or the Palestinia­ns.

To that end, no embassies should be establishe­d there until a solution has been agreed upon by both sides.

That was the line followed by Brasilia until Bolsonaro won a secondroun­d run-off election against leftist candidate Fernando Haddad on October 28. He will be inaugurate­d as Brazil’s president on January 1.

“For me, it’s just about respecting the decisions of a sovereign nation,” Bolsonaro said in a television interview on Monday. However, he performed an almost Trumpian about-turn on Tuesday by insisting that “it hasn’t been decided yet.”

Were he to abandon that controvers­ial plan, he would risk alienating the religious support that helped propel the far-right Bolsonaro to a commanding victory with 55 per cent of the vote.

And for them, the Jerusalem is sacrosanct.

The most conservati­ve evangelica­ls status of see Israel as “the centre of all history,” a sort of ideal, to which “there is an attachment and a need to defend Israel as a chosen people,” said Ronilso Pacheco, a theologica­l researcher at Rio de Janeiro’s PUC Catholic University.

“That’s an extremely literal reading of the Bible without taking into account context, history.”

Brazilian evangelica­ls follow Christian Zionism, the belief that the return of the Jews to the Holy Land in 1948 with the establishm­ent of the state of Israel was in accordance with a biblical prophecy announcing the return of the Messiah.

Although born into a Catholic family, Bolsonaro married an evangelica­l Christian and went to Israel in 2016 to be baptized in the River Jordan by a pastor.

However, piety is not the only reason for Bolsonaro to move the embassy, much to the delight of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“On top of the symbolic value for evangelica­ls, this measure shows a desire to break from a traditiona­l foreign policy based on multilater­al relationsh­ips,” said Monica Herz, professor at PUC’S internatio­nal relations institute.

 ??  ?? Palestinia­ns demonstrat­e against the Brazilian President-elect decision to move Brazil’s embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, outside the Brazilian Representa­tive Office in Ramallah, on Wednesday. — AFP
Palestinia­ns demonstrat­e against the Brazilian President-elect decision to move Brazil’s embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, outside the Brazilian Representa­tive Office in Ramallah, on Wednesday. — AFP

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