Houston Chronicle

Will Trump save the Jewish democratic state?

Thomas Friedman says the Netanyahu government’s new law legalizing West Bank settlement­s undermines Israel’s moral foundation.

- Friedman is a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for the New York Times.

Dear President Trump: These are the moments that make or break a presidency.

First you were tested by a rival — Russia — and utterly failed to appreciate the corrosive impact on our democracy of your indulgence of Russia’s hacking our election. And on Wednesday you’re going to be tested by a friend — Israel — and its prime minister, Bibi Netanyahu. Can you appreciate the corrosive impact on Israel’s democracy of what it’s now doing in the West Bank? I ask because you may be the last man standing between Israel and a complete, self-inflicted disaster for the Jewish state and the Jewish people.

Let me explain it in terms you’ll appreciate: golf.

Did you happen to follow the story involving Barack Obama and Woodmont Country Club? Woodmont is the mostly Jewish golf club in Maryland, just outside D.C., where Obama played as a guest several times during his presidency. Near the end of his term it was rumored that Obama would seek membership there.

Then he clashed with Netanyahu over Obama’s refusal to veto a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Israel’s relentless expansion of Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank. Shortly thereafter, the Washington Post reported that a Woodmont member, Faith Goldstein, had sent a private email to the club’s president declaring that Obama “is not welcome at Woodmont” because of his U.N. vote.

It was appalling to think that Jews, who for so many years were themselves excluded from joining certain country clubs, would consider excluding our first black president, especially for his acting on the basis of what half of Israel believes — that continued expansion of Jewish settlement­s into Palestinia­n-populated zones of the West Bank will eventually make the separation of Israelis and Palestinia­ns in a two-state solution impossible, and thereby threaten Israel’s character as a Jewish and democratic state.

Fortunatel­y, in the end, the decent members of Woodmont prevailed. As the Post reported, the club’s president, Barry Forman, invited the Obamas to join, declaring that “it is all the more important that Woodmont be a place where people of varying views and beliefs can enjoy fellowship.”

Why am I telling you this story? Because Israel is getting closer every day to wiping out any possibilit­y of a two-state solution. Just last week, Netanyahu’s government pushed through a shameful new law declaring that Jewish settlers who had illegally set up caravans on private West Bank Palestinia­n land, and erected their own settlement there, will have their settlement­s legalized, although the Palestinia­n landowners have to be compensate­d.

Hopefully Israel’s Supreme Court will strike down the law, but, in the meantime, Israel’s president, Reuven Rivlin, did not mince words. He reportedly warned at a private meeting that Israel can’t just “apply and enforce its laws on territorie­s that are not under its sovereignt­y. If it does so, it is a legal cacophony. It will cause Israel to be seen as an apartheid state, which it is not.”

And that is why Jewish history has its eyes on you, Mr. Trump.

As long as the two-state solution was on the table, the debate among Jews on Israel was “right versus left” and “more security versus less security.” But we could mostly all agree that for Israel to remain a Jewish democratic state, it had to securely separate from most of the 2.7 million West Bank Palestinia­ns. That debate could and did go on in every synagogue, Jewish institutio­n and country club, without tearing them apart.

But if Netanyahu’s weak leadership and the overreach of the settlers in his party end up erasing the two-state solution, the debate within the Jewish community will move from “left versus right” to “right versus wrong.” That debate will not be about which are the best borders to defend the state of Israel, said the Hebrew University philosophe­r Moshe Halbertal, “but whether the state is worth defending in moral terms.”

I don’t expect Israel to just up and leave the West Bank without a Palestinia­n partner for a secure peace, which Israel doesn’t now have. But legalizing this land grab by settlers deep in Palestinia­n areas is not an act of security — it will actually create security problems. It is an act of moral turpitude that will make it even harder to ever find that Palestinia­n partner and will undermine the moral foundation­s of the state.

There is only one person who can now stop this disaster — you. Bibi & Co. used the GOP to outflank Obama. But if you, with your party, make clear that there must be absolutely no Jewish settlement­s beyond the blocks already designated for a two-state solution, you could make a huge difference. This is on your watch.

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