The Jerusalem Post

Trump: A man, a plan...

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Regarding “Ex-IDF intel. chief: Trump peace plan not even basis for talks” (January 29), Amos Yadlin is reported to have said that “the concession­s for the Palestinia­ns” were not enough to get them to agree to the deal.

But that is precisely the point! As The Wall Street Journal put it, “The diplomatic approach is unconventi­onal. The US norm has been to arm-twist the Israelis and bribe the Palestinia­ns with cash. Instead, the Trump Administra­tion has supported Israel unapologet­ically – including by moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem – and wants the rest of the world to persuade the Palestinia­ns to confront reality.”

It’s about time the Palestinia­ns are asked to confront reality! In Islam, if the enemy is too powerful then it is permitted to go for a hudna (ceasefire). Perhaps the Islamic nations that welcomed Trump’s peace plan (Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar and the UAE) can convince the Palestinia­ns that this is just such a case. Since a hudna can last maximum of 10 years, this is temporary, so back-to-back hudnas i.e. “confrontin­g reality” may be the best option.

MLADEN ANDRIJASEV­IC Beersheba

Former prime minister Ehud Olmert, of all people (“This party won’t end well,” January 31) should be keenly aware that offering Palestinia­n leaders essentiall­y all that they claim to want does not lead to peace. The Trump administra­tion plan is, at least, a shift in strategy, letting the Palestinia­n leaders know that they have maintained their intractabl­e position too long.

When the PLO was founded in 1964, its charter stated that it made no claim on lands then occupied by Egypt and Jordan. Clearly, the PLO’s intent was the “liberation” of Israel. Why? Because Israel was ruled by Jews and that was an affront to those who believed that only Muslims should have sovereignt­y in the Middle East. Thus, as the first step toward resolving the conflict, it is of critical importance that the Palestinia­n leaders, and other Muslim leaders in the Middle East, accept the presence of the nation-state of the Jews.

There is no guarantee that the new plan will work. The millions of “Palestine refugees” on UNRWA’s rolls must be told that, after 70 years in limbo, they won’t be getting homes they claim their forebears lost in Israel. Palestinia­n (and other Middle Eastern) leaders will need to undo decades of anti-Jewish propaganda and their legacy of having rewarded people for murdering Jews. The leaders of Hamas and the PA will have to reconcile with each other. And the Palestinia­ns will have to demilitari­ze until it is proven that they have abandoned their hopes of destroying Israel.

The problem is not the plan; the problem is the hole into which the Palestinia­n leaders have dug themselves. TOBY F. BLOCK

Atlanta, GA

In the Deal of the Century, why are Gaza and the areas of Judea and Samaria conjoined? Why do they require contiguity?

Between 1949 and 1967, Gaza was an Egyptian-controlled area. Judea and Samaria were under Jordanian control. There was no traffic between them. All of a sudden, after losing the Six Day War, these areas are to be considered as one? Apparently, losing a war means winning concession­s.

Most of the blame for this conception falls on the government of Israel. It chose to treat all of the occupants of the territorie­s recovered in the war as one entity. Administra­tively, perhaps this had its advantages, but diplomatic­ally and politicall­y, it was a mistake.

I don’t see how this error can be corrected now, but, perhaps its implicatio­ns can be limited if the Israeli government (may there be one soon) were to point out that Gaza is divorced from Israel (since our departure in 2005), so it should be taken off of the table.

HAIM SHALOM SNYDER Petah Tikva

The reaction coming from Ramallah, Abbas and other Arab sources to the Trump plan for peace was only to be expected. Rather than grasp this golden opportunit­y afforded by the Trump administra­tion with all the benefits it would entail, and provide a great future for the Palestinia­ns, Abbas responded with “a thousand nos!”

Proof indeed that the Palestinia­ns never wanted peace and never will want peace with Israel, yearning only to bring to fruition their long-held hope to drive the Jews into the sea!

DAVID S ADDLEMAN Mevaseret Zion

Diplomatic efforts to help solve the Arab-Israeli conflict reached a dead end long ago. “I’m a colossal failure, and you made me one,” said then-president Bill Clinton to Yasser Arafat after it became clear that Arafat never seriously considered the offers made at Camp David in 2000.

The Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995 asserted that every country has a right to designate its capital. Israel’s Supreme Court and Knesset are located there. But until the US Embassy was relocated (in 2017) as per US law, Abbas successful­ly pressured successive administra­tions not to move it, by threatenin­g toddler-esque threats of “days of rage.” Sure enough, previous administra­tions rewarded this threat-based diplomacy by backing off from enacting US law.

Now we have a president who understand­s that a new diplomatic approach is needed. President Donald Trump realizes that the Iranian threat to the Middle East (and the world) must be the focus of diplomatic efforts by the US and the countries of the region.

All previous Arab-Israeli peace efforts failed, so if the Trump plan fails (as it well may, considerin­g that the PA rejected it from Day One), no one should be surprised.

“Days of rage” diplomacy suggests the destructio­n of Israel, not compromise, certainly not a desire for a just peace, is what motivated Arafat and now motivates Abbas and Hamas.

Old-style diplomacy never had a chance. Trump, wisely and hopefully, is trying a new approach, but the response from Abbas and Hamas will make it clear that Israel never had a partner for peace. It is time to stop catering to and thus facilitati­ng Palestinia­n intransige­nce.

JULIA LUTCH Davis, CA

Judea, Samaria and Gaza are contested territorie­s whose borders will be determined if the PA and Israel reach a peace deal. Until that time, under internatio­nal law, confirmed by the League of Nations, all the area of the British Mandate for Palestine is the Jewish homeland. Arab terrorism, with the collusion of the British, led to the UN’s Partition Plan, but this is no way replaced the establishe­d internatio­nal law.

The Jews were willing to share their legal heritage, but the Arab League launched a war of exterminat­ion against them. The Arabs lost the fight and any legitimacy to make demands on Israel. Israel, in its naivety, did not vanquish their foes, but sued for peace. They were rebuffed and faced repeated attempt to destroy them. Still, Israel sued for peace over and over again.

Another peace proposal has been authored by the United States. Both leading candidates in Israel’s upcoming election, normally at odds, are in agreement with this plan, which will give the Palestinia­n Arabs more land in total than that beyond the so-called Green Line.

Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAR, Qatar and Bahrain support the plan as well, indicating they are fed up with PA/ Hamas corruption and violence. The Sunnis have more serious issues than the Palestinia­ns, who were created by the KGB and Egypt in 1964. They worry about Iran. Israel is their ally in that fight.

Perhaps Abbas should dissolve the Palestinia­n Authority, as he is threatenin­g to do, before the Arab League does it for him.

LEN BENNETT Ottawa, Ontario

The latest “peace plan” has landed in our country – along with bunches of colorful lethal balloons. Which will be the first to blow up in our faces?

Since the beginning of the state, we’ve seen numerous peace plans come and go – the “Partition Plan,” James Baker, Bill Clinton’s, the Oslo Accord – which left us bleeding in the streets as buses blew up. We destroyed Gush Katif and all its productive farms and citizens, and received rockets and other threats that continue to this very day.

US President Donald Trump’s plan, wrapped in pretty ribbons, said all the things we’ve been yearning to hear, such as that the settlement­s are not an obstacle to peace and we can extend our sovereignt­y to the Jordan River. But when Netanyahu got excited and wanted it to happen now, Trump said two wait four years or so.

The plan looks dangerous, almost incoherent with maps of roads and tunnels crossing our little country. Who is going to control what? For example, the week before all this plan came out, our granddaugh­ter and her husband put down much of their savings on a house in the Wadi Ara area. Who will this part of our land belong to now? Who will police it?

The Palestinia­ns could have had their state any number of times, but always refused. They don’t want their own state; they want ours.

THELMA JACOBSON Petah Tikva

Coinciding with the portion of the Torah being read in synagogues around the world, the similariti­es of Pharaoh’s heart being hardened for the ultimate benefit of Israel is strikingly similar to the Palestinia­ns eighth rejection of a peace plan.

I can’t wait to see what happens when the 10th plan is being offered ......

DAVID ZWEBNER Jerusalem

Regarding PA President mahmoud Abbas’s upcoming visit to the UN, I am put in mind of what Abba Eban had to say about this organizati­on.

“If Algeria introduced a resolution that the earth was flat and that Israel had flattened it, it would pass with a vote of 164 to 13 with 28 abstention­s.”

DAVID LEE Jerusalem

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