Houston Chronicle Sunday

Latest shrine crisis has hardened leaders’ positions

- By Karin Laub

AMMAN, Jordan — The latest crisis over one of the most combustibl­e spots in the Middle East has been defused but has pushed the leaders of Israel, Jordan and the Palestinia­ns into tougher positions that could trigger confrontat­ions.

The standoff over a Jerusalem shrine holy to Muslims and Jews also signaled the festering Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict is shifting further from what was once seen as a territoria­l dispute toward a religious one.

On July 14, three Arab assailants opened fire from the walled compound at Israeli police guards, killing two. The shooting left Israeli police scrambling for ways to screen worshipper­s for weapons as they enter the Muslim-run site through eight gates.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved a police recommenda­tion to install metal detectors — reportedly over objections from Israel’s military.

Muslim fears stoked

The new measures stoked Muslim fears that Israel is trying to expand control over the site under the guise of security — a charge Israel denies. Palestinia­ns in Jerusalem, led by senior Muslim clerics, began staging mass street prayers in protest, four Palestinia­ns were killed in street clashes with Israeli troops and a Palestinia­n killed three members of an Israeli family in a West Bank settlement.

Tensions ebbed after Israel removed the metal detectors and other devices.

Abbas sidlined

Mahmoud Abbas, who runs autonomous enclaves in the West Bank, was in China, and his return home a week into the crisis reinforced perception­s among many Palestinia­ns that he is out of touch. Trying to assert a leadership role, Abbas announced a suspension of security coordinati­on with Israel until the situation at the shrine is restored to what it was before July 14.

For years, Abbas’ forces worked with Israel to foil attacks by militants in the West Bank, often acting against a shared foe, the Islamic militant Hamas. Such mutually beneficial cooperatio­n, though unpopular among Palestinia­ns, survived many crises and failed efforts to negotiate the terms of Palestinia­n statehood in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, lands Israel captured in 1967.

Abbas threatened in the past to end security coordinati­on, but never followed through. If he restores such ties, he risks further harm to his domestic standing. If he doesn’t, Israel’s rightwing government could retaliate and threaten the survival of his Palestinia­n Authority.

The crisis highlighte­d Abbas’ fading influence in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem. He also risks being cut off from Gaza, the territory he lost to Hamas in 2007. In recent weeks, Hamas and a former Abbas-aide-turned rival, Mohammed Dahlan, forged a Gaza power-sharing deal that would open the blockaded territory to Egypt.

Netanyahu under fire

Netanyahu was lambasted by all sides in Israel.

The center-left accused him of making hasty decisions at a volatile site — the third-holiest in Islam and the most sacred in Judaism — that has triggered major rounds of Israeli-Palestinia­n violence, including one involving Netanyahu in the mid-1990s.

Netanyahu’s ultra-nationalis­t rivals, key to the survival of his coalition, said he capitulate­d to Arab pressure and effectivel­y encouraged Palestinia­ns to push for more concession­s.

Netanyahu responded with a flurry of tough statements.

He ordered the resumption of plans to build a West Bank settlement and reportedly gave the green light to draft legislatio­n to bring several West Bank settlement­s under Jerusalem’s jurisdicti­on.

 ?? Isafrir Abayov / Associated Press ?? An Israeli officer checks the ID of a Palestinia­n man at a checkpoint outside Jerusalem’s Old City. Muslims fear Israelis are trying to control the site.
Isafrir Abayov / Associated Press An Israeli officer checks the ID of a Palestinia­n man at a checkpoint outside Jerusalem’s Old City. Muslims fear Israelis are trying to control the site.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States