The Signal

Follow-up to my open letter

- W. E. Gutman is a widely published journalist and author, a former press officer at Israel’s Consulate General in New York, and a former Signal commentato­r. He lives in the Antelope Valley. W.E. GUTMAN

Re. my Open Letter to the Palestinia­n People (The Signal, Jan 2, 2018) I will not dwell on the (American) partisan politics that enabled Mr. Trump to ascend to the presidency of the US -- as they are obvious. Nor will I comment on Israel’s hegemonic objectives (the latest being the further strangulat­ion by the country’s theocratic majority of any initiative that would lead to a two-state solution). I will simply cite facts:

In an attempt to solidify Israel’s power and control over Jerusalem, the Knesset enacted a law on Tuesday (January 2) making it almost impossible to negotiate Jerusalem as part of a peace process. A few days earlier, Prime Minister Netanyahu’s disciples voted unanimousl­y to apply Israeli law to West Bank settlement­s, a move that could be seen as de facto annexation of the territory. The law was passed as an amendment to Israel’s Basic Law -- the closest thing Israel has to a constituti­on -- which gives it more political weight. The amendment stipulates that any attempt to transfer sovereign control of Jerusalem to a “foreign entity”(?) needs to be approved by a supermajor­ity of 80 Knesset members out of 120. Previously, the requiremen­t was a majority of 61 members. And in a move that is surely to be met with Palestinia­n outrage, the amendment also authorizes the Knesset to change the municipal borders of Jerusalem with a simple majority.

Israel’s Basic Law is simple and unambiguou­s: Israel has no implied or explicit plan to make peace with the Palestinia­ns -- even if they recognized the Jewish state’s right to exist. Instead, as history has shown, patience, attrition, expropriat­ions, expulsions, force of arms, and psychologi­cal warfare are intended to weaken Palestinia­n aspiration­s for statehood and self-rule; and to trivialize and enfeeble internatio­nal efforts that would lead to a two-state solution.

Last, to those who would chose ad hominem attacks on this writer’s person instead of dispassion­ate analysis of facts, I say this: I am unapologet­ically proud to be a Jew and I continue to support Israel’s unconditio­nal right to protect itself against domestic and foreign enemies. Having said that, if decrying the colossal inequities committed against Palestinia­ns during the past 70 years earns me the befouling epithet of “anti-Semite,” so be it. It’s infinitely better than being a soulless hypocrite. As for Senate Bill 1322 (the Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995) it was an act of feel-good political posturing. The fact that it laid dormant for 22 years speaks volumes about its urgency, not to mention the sincerity of its proponents. Its ill-timed resurrecti­on is nothing short of colossal chutzpah.

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