Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump gives eviction notice to PLO’S D.C. mission

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — National security adviser John Bolton announced Monday that the Trump administra­tion is shuttering the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on’s diplomatic mission in Washington because “the Palestinia­ns refuse to take steps to start direct and meaningful negotiatio­ns with Israel.”

The State Department has instructed the PLO “to vacate the property not later than October 10.”

Chief Palestinia­n negotiator Saeb Erekat acknowledg­ed that a U.S. official had notified the mission about the pending closure.

“This is yet another affirmatio­n of the Trump administra­tion’s policy to collective­ly punish the Palestinia­n people, including by cutting

PALESTINIA­NS

financial support for humanitari­an services including health and education,” he said in a statement.

Relations between Palestinia­n officials and Washington chilled considerab­ly in December, when President Donald Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and pledged to move the U.S. Embassy there.

Trump son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner and special envoy Jason Greenblatt have been working to craft a “deal of the century,” as the president described his dream Middle East peace plan. However, Palestinia­n leaders have refused to participat­e, and the administra­tion has tried to make it increasing­ly painful for them to stay away from the bargaining table.

In August, the White House withheld $200 million in expected aid to a United Nations relief agency that provides education and health services to Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and Gaza.

The U.N. agency lamented the move as “an evident politiciza­tion of humanitari­an aid” that “risks underminin­g the foundation­s of the internatio­nal multi-lateral and humanitari­an systems.”

James Carafano, of the right-leaning Heritage Foundation, said giving the Palestinia­ns money wasn’t working.

“If we can’t get your attention by being nice to you, maybe we’ll get your attention doing the opposite,” he said.

Erekat, however, responded, “We reiterate that the rights of the Palestinia­n people are not for sale, that we will not succumb to U.S. threats and bullying.”

He then called on the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, or ICC, to investigat­e “Israeli crimes.”

The mission closure announceme­nt was embedded inside a full-throated jeremiad delivered by Bolton to the right-leaning Federalist Society. In it, Bolton challenged the ICC as an unaccounta­ble internatio­nal body that would deny the United States, Israel and other countries that never agreed to fall under the ICC’S jurisdicti­on the ability to choose their “means of self-defense.”

Bolton has been a critic of the internatio­nal court since it was estab- lished in 2002. In November, before Trump installed Bolton in the White House, the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations wrote an opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal about an ICC prosecutor starting an investigat­ion into “alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity” in Afghanista­n since mid-2003.

The “largely unspoken, but always central” goal of the ICC, Bolton warned, was to “constrain the

United States” and target “America’s senior political leadership.”

Bolton delivered his address at the Mayflower Hotel, where Trump delivered his first major foreign policy speech in April 2016. Bolton noted, “At the time, candidate Trump promised he would ‘always put the interests of the American people and American security above all else.’”

In that spirit, Bolton warned that if the internatio­nal tribunal goes after the U.S., Israel or other American allies, the administra­tion could withhold financial and military assistance from countries that cooperate with ICC probes aimed at American citizens and allies, ban ICC judges and prosecutor­s from entering the U.S. and even prosecute them as criminals.

“The Trump administra­tion’s threat to criminally prosecute and sanction Internatio­nal Criminal Court judges and prosecutor­s is straight out of an authoritar­ian playbook,” responded Jamil Dakwar, director of the human rights program at the American Civil Liberties Union. “The unpreceden­ted threat comes as U.S. officials face, for the first time, the specter of full criminal investigat­ion by the court for possible war crimes and crimes against humanity in Afghanista­n, which is an ICC member.”

For his part, University of California, Berkeley law school professor John Yoo, an attorney in the administra­tion of former President George W. Bush, said the ICC can do little about the world’s bad actors.

“If (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s tanks roll into the Baltics, the ICC is not going to stop him,” he said.

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal. com or 202-662-7391. Follow @ Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? John Bolton
John Bolton

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States