Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Backlash feared if Palestinia­n aid cut

- RUTH EGLASH AND LOVEDAY MORRIS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sufian Taha of The Washington Post.

JERUSALEM — The U.S.’ threat to cut aid to the Palestinia­ns to force them into a peace deal may have dire humanitari­an consequenc­es that could backfire on Israel, Israeli security officials and analysts warned Wednesday, while Palestinia­ns slammed it as blackmail.

The U.S. pays “the Palestinia­ns HUNDRED OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year and get no appreciati­on or respect,” Trump tweeted Tuesday evening. “With the Palestinia­ns no longer willing to talk peace, why should we make these massive future payments to them.”

Earlier in the day Trump’s envoy to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, suggested the United States will cut funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, the agency that assists Palestinia­n refugees, until the Palestinia­n leadership returns to the negotiatin­g table. The United States is the agency’s biggest donor and gave it more than $360 million last year, 40 percent of the organizati­on’s budget.

Palestinia­n officials reacted furiously to what they interprete­d as an attempt by the United States to force them to give up their claims to Jerusalem in return for continued financial aid.

“We will not be blackmaile­d,” said Palestinia­n official Hanan Ashrawi, a member of the PLO’s executive committee.

Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas said last month that the United States had disqualifi­ed itself from a role brokering a peace process by recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and saying he would move the U.S. Embassy there. The move was taken by Palestinia­n officials as a clear indication of U.S. bias toward Israel and a rejection of Palestinia­n claims to the city, even though Trump said at the time that it should not be read as a position on the city’s final status.

“Cutting funding would not bring anything good to the situation,” said an Israeli security official speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the topic. “Doing this would end up making the Palestinia­n leadership even weaker, then there really would be no one to talk to or rely upon.”

Abbas’ Palestinia­n Authority coordinate­s with Israel on security, but the already weak leader has been further undermined by Trump’s Jerusalem decision, with nothing to show for decades of negotiatio­ns.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency runs schools and educationa­l programs that Israeli defense officials see as an important counterbal­ance to Hamas, which has controlled Gaza for the past decade, while the organizati­on also provides essential primary health care and other services for Palestinia­ns.

“Traditiona­lly the Israeli defense establishm­ent has resisted pressure by Israeli hawks who want to shut down [the agency’s] funding,” said Ofer Zalzberg, a senior analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group. “They say, if it’s not [the agency], then education will be provided by Hamas.”

Chris Gunness, the relief agency’s spokesman, said the agency had not been notified of any changes in U.S. funding. The organizati­on’s work “is described as indispensa­ble to the dignity of Palestine refugees and the stability of the region,” he said.

The U.N. agency runs 700 schools for Palestinia­ns across the region, nearly 150 primary health clinics and employs over 30,000 teaching staff, doctors, nurses, social workers, sanitation laborers and engineers.

“We still very much want to have a peace process. Nothing changes with that. The Palestinia­ns now have to show they want to come to the table,” Haley said Tuesday in the U.N. Security Council. “As of now, they’re not coming to the table, but they ask for aid. We’re not giving the aid. We’re going to make sure that they come to the table.”

However, Trump’s tweet, which also referred to his Jerusalem decision, may have the opposite effect and only cause a stronger backlash, Zalzberg said.

“It’s being perceived as deeply offensive,” he said. “It’s been taken to say, ‘We will pay you to make a concession on Jerusalem.’”

The U.S. decision to recognize Jerusalem prompted weeks of protests in Arab and Muslim countries around the world and numerous so-called days of rage in Jerusalem, Israel and the West Bank. At least 12 Palestinia­ns have been killed in clashes with Israeli security forces, including two militants in an Israeli airstrike that came in response to rockets fired from Gaza at civilian areas in southern Israel.

Since the announceme­nt, rocket fire from the Gaza Strip has reached levels not seen since the 2014 war between Israel and Hamas. The Israeli military said two rockets were fired at Israeli territory on Wednesday.

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