Khaleej Times

Trump has no real deal for Palestine

- Hussein ibish

Arefugee is someone with little left to lose. He’s lost his home, his livelihood and his land. Often, she’s lost her country, too. That’s what’s happened to the approximat­ely five million Palestinia­ns registered as refugees by the United Nations.

Now the Trump administra­tion is trying to rob the Palestinia­ns of two of the few things most refugees do have: humanitari­an assistance and their legal status as refugees.

US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and special adviser on the Middle East, Jared Kushner, is reportedly seeking to redefine almost all the Palestinia­n refugees out of existence, by claiming that only those who were personally displaced in the Arab-Israeli wars of 1947-48 and 1967 can be considered refugees even if the underlying conflict remains unresolved.

And the administra­tion has cancelled all future US funding for the UN agency that cares for Palestinia­n refugees and is pushing for its eliminatio­n, while pressuring Jordan to strip the two million Palestinia­n refugees in its country of that status.

If the White House has its way, almost all the Palestinia­n refugees would no longer be classified as refugees and would lose the agency and funding that provides them basic levels of health, education and other essential services.

This is a cruel but logical next step in the process begun in December, when Trump recognised Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Other than reinforcin­g the support of his evangelica­l Christian political allies, the primary effect of that was to try, as Trump keeps insisting, to “take Jerusalem off the table” in negotiatio­ns. “We don’t have to talk about it anymore,” he recently insisted. In laying the groundwork for a promised peace proposal, Kushner and company are demolishin­g the diplomatic, legal and logical basis for Palestinia­n-Israeli negotiatio­ns and trying to strip away the main issues Palestinia­ns can use as leverage in talks with Israel.

Since 1993, the negotiatio­ns have been predicated on a set of mutually accepted issues to be resolved only by agreement and not prejudiced by any party: borders and settlement­s, security, refugees and Jerusalem.

Israel has repeatedly indicated discomfort with the last two. In particular, it doesn’t want to compromise on Jerusalem, which it refers to as its “eternal and undivided capital.” Nonetheles­s, the rest of the world unanimousl­y recognised East Jerusalem as a territory under foreign occupation after

Israel seized it in the 1967 war, and has insisted that its future be determined through negotiatio­ns. Trump has changed all that by unilateral­ly recognisin­g Israel’s claims on Jerusalem and not making any distinctio­n between East and West.

And now, by pushing to redefine almost all the Palestinia­n refugees out of existence,

Kushner is effectivel­y seeking to eliminate the refugee issue as well. That would prevent Palestinia­ns from using concession­s on Jerusalem or refugees to gain reciprocal Israeli concession­s on borders, settlement­s and other matters. Indeed, trying to take Jerusalem and refugees “off the table” effectivel­y leaves Palestinia­ns with little negotiatin­g leverage beyond the fact of their own existence, removing from them even the power to say “no.”

This systematic weakening of their already poor hand appears to be aimed at forcing the Palestinia­ns to accede to an onerous set of conditions that they’ve always considered unacceptab­le. The ultimate aim appears to be the removal from the equation of any truly independen­t, sovereign Palestinia­n state. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has suggested that the most Israel would allow Palestinia­ns is an undefined “state minus” and a primarily “economic peace.”

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas reportedly claimed that Trump offered him a peace deal based on one of the oldest and most discredite­d ideas in the peace-process playbook: the Israeli fantasy of a Palestinia­n “confederat­ion” with Jordan. But there is no chance that Palestinia­ns would consider this idea. The Jordanians, too, won’t consider it unless Palestinia­ns first have their own independen­t state. Abbas is right that confederat­ion is actually an interestin­g idea to add to the conversati­on about peace, but only if it involves Israel. The conflict, after all, is between the Palestinia­ns and Israel, not Jordan. A Palestinia­n-Israeli confederat­ion could allow for a joint presence in the land while still letting both Israelis and Palestinia­ns exercise self-determinat­ion and self-rule by sharing some responsibi­lities while retaining others individual­ly. If Israelis and Palestinia­ns could make such an arrangemen­t work, Jordan, too, might want to join it. That could actually help end a conflict, foster cooperatio­n, and bring, rather than force, peoples together. But, in this case, it is the Israelis who won’t hear of it. If Trump and Kushner really imagine that stripping Palestinia­ns of their claims regarding Jerusalem and refugees will coerce them into abandoning any aspiration­s for independen­ce and first-class citizenshi­p, they’re in for a surprise.

But if they’re just trying to set up a pretext for castigatin­g the Palestinia­ns as the party that “said no to peace,” it’s a sound strategem. The only question then would be, how much harm to long-term prospects for peace and short-term calm and stability has been done just to point the finger of blame at the weakest and most vulnerable party?

this systematic weakening of their already poor hand appears to be aimed at forcing the Palestinia­ns to accede to an onerous set of conditions

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