Khaleej Times

Palestine deserves fair and just peace, not a forced peace

- daoud kuttab CORE ISSUE

In a matter of three weeks, the United States government has attacked the Palestinia­n people on three fronts. First, on November 17, President Donald Trump’s administra­tion announced its decision (subsequent­ly reversed) to close the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on’s diplomatic office in Washington, DC. Then, on December 5, the US Congress voted unanimousl­y to adopt the Taylor Force Act, which blocks aid to the Palestinia­n Authority from 2018 to 2024, unless the PA stops paying monthly salaries and other benefits to the families of killed or convicted Palestinia­n militants. But it was the third attack, which came the following day, that will prove most devastatin­g to efforts to achieve peace.

In defiance of overwhelmi­ng global opposition, not to mention past United Nations General Assembly and Security Council resolution­s, Trump announced that the US will officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The message is clear: the Trump administra­tion is determined to dictate the Israeli version of peace with the Palestinia­ns, rather than to mediate an equitable agreement between the two sides.

Of course, that is not how Trump’s administra­tion presents it. As the New York Times reported just before the announceme­nt, Trump administra­tion officials believe the decision, which entails moving the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, could actually hasten the peace process, “by removing a source of ambiguity from the American position.” After all, they point out, the embassy question comes up every six months, when the president has to sign a new waiver to keep the embassy in Tel Aviv – a process that, from their perspectiv­e, repeatedly stokes political tension.

In his address on the topic, Trump reiterated this argument. Officially recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, he asserted, “is a long-overdue step to advance the peace process and to work towards a lasting agreement.” He also claimed that the decision “is not intended, in any way, to reflect a departure from our strong commitment to facilitate a lasting peace agreement,” one “that is a great deal for the Israelis and a great deal for the Palestinia­ns.”

But, in that same speech, Trump betrayed the superiorit­y he ascribes to Israel: “Israel is a sovereign nation with the right like every other sovereign nation to determine its own capital.” Despite its best efforts, Palestine, of course, is not recognized as a sovereign state by the US. So, far from seeking a fair peace deal between the two parties, Trump has effectivel­y declared victory for Israel – and instructed the Palestinia­ns to accept defeat quietly.

Yet the Palestinia­ns have displayed a profound capacity for resistance. Just last summer, when the Israeli government decided unilateral­ly to install metal detectors at the entrances of Al Haram Al Sharif/Al Aqsa Mosque, Palestinia­ns demonstrat­ed outside the mosque for two weeks, forcing the Israelis to reverse the decision.

Moving the US embassy to Jerusalem is a far more powerful symbolic move, suggesting that it could spur even more formidable resistance – and not just from the 300,000 Palestinia­ns who live in East Jerusalem, or even from the more than 12 million Palestinia­ns around the world. What Trump’s administra­tion fails to recognize is that Jerusalem – the third-holiest site in Islam, after Mecca and Medina – isn’t just an Israeli-Palestinia­n issue; all of the world’s 350 million Arabs and 1.5 billion Muslims have a direct and vital stake in it.

The fact is that leaders across the Muslim and Arab world are not going to allow Trump to hand Jerusalem to Israel unilateral­ly, simply to satisfy his small base of US Christian Zionist evangelica­ls (he received the support of less than a quarter of American Jews). And, indeed, Mohammad Shtayyeh, a member of the Fatah central committee, has already pledged that the Palestinia­n leadership, in coordinati­on with Jordan and other Arab states, will resist the dictate.

Yet it is not just Arabs or Muslims who support the Palestinia­ns’ just demands for a fair peace agreement. Innumerabl­e people worldwide – of all faiths and background­s, as well as resolution­s by the UN Security Council, the UN General Assembly, and the Internatio­nal Court of Justice – also support this stance. This is true even in the US: according to a poll released by the Arab American Institute, only 20% of Americans (including American Arabs and American Jews) favor moving the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

The Palestinia­ns are calling for a two-state solution, with East Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinia­n state and West Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. The Israelis, by contrast, have consistent­ly thwarted a two-state solution, and demanded to have Jerusalem all to themselves. In short, it is the Israeli government’s position – and that of the Trump administra­tion – that must change, if the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict is ever to be resolved.

Any viable peace deal must be able to stand the test of time. And that means it must be fair and just, rather than leaving one party seething with resentment – especially if that resentment extends to millions of people worldwide. Attempting to ram a solution down Palestinia­ns’ throats will increase the likelihood of even more violence, not peace. – Daoud Kuttab is a Palestinia­n from Jerusalem. — Project Syndicate

Leaders across the Muslim and Arab world are not going to allow Trump to hand Jerusalem to Israel unilateral­ly, simply to satisfy his small base of US Christian Zionist evangelica­ls

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