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Move frees Palestinia­ns to focus on peace

- By Eli Lake

A year ago, when members of Donald Trump’s transition team first said they intended to move the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, I was skeptical. Like most of the foreign policy establishm­ent, not to mention America’s Arab and European allies, I thought such a move was too risky.

You will see that argument a lot today. Israel needs U.S. help in strengthen­ing its blossoming relationsh­ips with Arab states that were once its foes. Why risk straining those ties with a largely symbolic move?

I have since changed my mind. There are a few reasons. To start, that column came out right before the outgoing administra­tion broke precedent and abstained from a U.N. Security Council resolution that said all of East Jerusalem was effectivel­y occupied territory. This would mean any Israeli constructi­on within the disputed territory was a violation of internatio­nal law. Barack Obama’s parting gift to the Palestinia­ns made U.S. recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital more urgent.

But what really changed my mind was this summer’s metal detector uprising. Here’s what happened: Israeli Arabs began a rampage near the mosque that sits atop the Temple Mount, an area that contains the remains of the outer wall of the Second Jewish Temple at its base and al Aqsa Mosque on top. The gunmen then fled into the esplanade around the mosque and began firing back at Israeli police officers from within the holy compound.

What happened next was both tragic and cynical. While Palestinia­n leader Mahmoud Abbas condemned the terrorists, his political party, Fatah, also called for “days of rage.” Was this in response to the gunmen at al Aqsa? No, it was because Israeli authoritie­s sought to place metal detectors at al-Aqsa compound following a horrific shooting. This was after Israeli police found weapons stored in the mosque compound.

The traditiona­l way to understand this episode is that it proves how much of a tinderbox the Jerusalem issue is. Don’t pour gasoline on burning embers. Already Palestinia­ns in Gaza have begun “days of rage” in protest of Trump’s decision. The Organizati­on of the Islamic Conference called Trump’s plan to recognize Jerusalem an act of “naked aggression.” The State Department has warned recognitio­n will bring violence.

But official American neutrality on Jerusalem has not stopped Palestinia­n leaders from exercising a riot veto before. Indeed, neutrality has created a moral hazard.

Just look at the conditions that led to the Second Intifada in 2000. The official justificat­ion for that uprising was the visit by Ariel Sharon, before his election as prime minister, to the Temple Mount. But that was a pretext. As Palestinia­n Media Watch has documented, Yasser Arafat, the late Palestinia­n leader, had already planned the Second Intifada, after the final round of Oslo negotiatio­ns under President Bill Clinton collapsed, weeks before Sharon’s visit to the Temple Mount. As the Palestinia­n Authority’s former communicat­ions minister, Imad Faluji, said in a private speech in December 2000: “Whoever thinks that the Intifadah started because of the hated Sharon’s visit to Al-Aqsa Mosque is mistaken. That was only the straw breaking the Palestinia­n people’s patience. This Intifadah was already planned since the President returned from the recent talks at Camp David.”

So what was America’s reaction to all of this? In Clinton’s final months in office, the official line from the U.S. government was for both sides to ease tensions, as he franticall­y tried to restart the collapsed peace negotiatio­ns. Under Clinton’s successor, George W. Bush, the position was pretty much the same. It was not until 2002, when the U.S. discovered a shipment of weapons from Iran to the Palestinia­n Authority, that Bush decided to cut Arafat off and call for new elections. This however did not stop the Bush administra­tion from continuing to work the peace process. That same year, Bush became the first American president to call for an independen­t Palestinia­n state.

None of this is to say the Palestinia­ns do not have real grievances. They do. Palestinia­ns still live under occupation in the West Bank and blockade in Gaza. Israel detains thousands of people in military prisons where they are not afforded free trials. Restrictio­ns on movement and checkpoint­s make daily life a grinding burden.

But it does show that Western sensitivit­y on Jerusalem has allowed Palestinia­n leaders to weaponize the issue. Palestinia­ns are fed a steady stream of propaganda about the danger to Jerusalem. Even Abbas, who has authorized cooperatio­n with the Israel Defense Forces in the West Bank, has given speeches warning about Jewish plans to alter alAqsa and Jerusalem. All the while, Western leaders in particular have continued to call on both sides to negotiate.

And that’s the real danger of sticking to the policy of Jerusalem neutrality. It feeds a Palestinia­n illusion: With enough patience and rage, one day the Jews will be evicted from their eternal capital. That’s not going to happen. And as more and more Arab states come to rely on Israel in the regional war against Iran and its proxies, this fact is becoming more visible to the rest of the region.

Under Trump’s predecesso­r, Obama aides used to say they were giving Israel tough love. They said a real friend won’t allow Israel to keep expanding settlement­s when eventually there needs to be a two-state solution. Trump is doing something like this for the Palestinia­ns. A real friend won’t allow Palestinia­n leaders to keep promising to liberate a city that is the capital of its peace partner. That straight talk should not be the end of peace talks, but the beginning.

Eli Lake is a Bloomberg View columnist. He was the senior national security correspond­ent for the Daily Beast and covered national security and intelligen­ce for the Washington Times, the New York Sun and UPI.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/TNS ?? President Trump’s order recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel bucks the policy of neutrality.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/TNS President Trump’s order recognizin­g Jerusalem as the capital of Israel bucks the policy of neutrality.
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