The National - News

Trump’s accelerate­d Jerusalem decision is desperate electionee­ring

- JOSEPH DANA

TTrump doesn’t believe he will kick-start a peace deal as a result of removing the most important final status issue

om Barrack has been one of US president Donald Trump’s biggest supporters from the start of his campaign. The founder of the private equity firm North Star continued his defence of Mr Trump’s policies in Abu Dhabi last month during the first Milken Institute Middle East summit. For Mr Barrack, Mr Trump’s seemingly irrational diplomatic manoeuvres belie strategic thinking that is changing the world.

Mr Barrack argued that Mr Trump’s ban on citizens from several Muslim countries had somehow brought the Muslim world together. The evidence for this statement was the historic 2017 Riyadh summit in which the US president met with leaders and representa­tives of 55 Arab and Muslim countries in Saudi Arabia.

Mr Trump’s defenders in the United States and around the world are increasing­ly warming to the idea that the president’s irrational­ity is actually a sign of brilliance – especially when it comes to his decisions on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict. At the conservati­ve CPAC conference last week, the president reaffirmed his commitment to moving the US embassy to Jerusalem. To add insult to injury, the embassy will be moved on Israel’s independen­ce day, which Palestinia­ns call the nakba or catastroph­e.

How did we reach this point in the conflict? In Ernest Hemingway’s class novel The Sun Also Rises, one character is asked how he went bankrupt. “Gradually, then suddenly”, the character responds. The same can be said about Israel’s occupation of Palestinia­n land. Throughout the Oslo years, when both sides were supposed to be working out the details of self-government for a Palestinia­n state, Israel entrenched its occupation. Existing settlement­s were expanded while land was siphoned off throughout the West Bank for military firing zones and “security perimeters”. The Israeli separation wall barely followed the contours of the 1967 armistice line, and instead penetrated deep into the West Bank. Everything on the Israeli side became de facto Israeli territory.

The illusion of peace talks continued as this land grab accelerate­d and nowhere was this naked theft on greater display than in Jerusalem. Israel expanded Jewish settlement­s to encircle the old city. In Palestinia­n neighbourh­oods such as Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan, Israeli settlers would purchase or occupy a house, protests would ensue, and the Israeli border police would crush local dissent, paving the way for more settlers to move in. As the years pressed on, Israel establishe­d a ring of settlement­s throughout Jerusalem, all the while making residency difficult to maintain for Palestinia­ns through a Kafkaesque list of requiremen­ts and provisions. The formula hasn’t changed much since 1967: remove as many Palestinia­ns as possible through impossible residency requiremen­ts and the deprivatio­n of municipali­ty services while populating Palestinia­n neighbourh­oods with Israeli settlement­s.

But it wasn’t all naked aggression and occupation. The Jerusalem municipali­ty has recently invested in branding campaigns that cast it as a dynamic and welcoming city for tourists. A tram line connecting East and West Jerusalem drew the attention of urban planners from around the world. The Jerusalem Marathon is now a marquee event, attracting thousands of internatio­nal runners. The art scene is thriving along with the opening of several internatio­nal hotel chains.

The problem with the branding campaign and events like the Jerusalem Marathon are that they treat the city as if it was unified. Unbeknown to several runners, the marathon route enters occupied Palestinia­n land. The tram is a physical representa­tion of Israeli unificatio­n as it travels deep into occupied territory.

With this picture of Jerusalem in mind, how does Mr Trump’s decision to move the US embassy to Jerusalem affect life on the ground or even prospects for peace? The answer is not much. The occupation of Jerusalem has been ongoing for decades. Israel has used the peace process to advance its goals of uniting Israeli rule for all the land from the Mediterran­ean Sea to the Jordan River. The embassy decision only serves to show Israel’s leaders and the country’s population that no one is going to stop them.

As for Mr Trump, his decision likely has little to do with his own beliefs on the conflict; nor does he actually believe he will kick-start a peace deal as a result of removing the most important final status issue from the negotiatin­g table. This move is all about domestic US politics and his ability to raise enough funds to fend off a fullscale Democratic attack in this year’s midterm elections.

Shortly after Mr Trump announced that the embassy would move on nakba day, the New York Times reported that casino mogul and staunch pro-Israel supporter Sheldon Adelson was considerin­g paying for the move. Mr Adelson will likely use his roughly $40 billion fortune to support Mr Trump and the Republican­s in their upcoming election battles as a direct result of this Jerusalem decision.

This is not strategic thinking, as Mr Barrack so eloquently argues, it is simple election year politics for a desperate politician and party.

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