Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Either way, Trump’s wild card is a game-changer

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IN POLITICS, grand gestures often backfire on those who make them. Think of Neville Chamberlai­n returning from Munich in 1938, waving a piece of paper with Adolf Hitler’s signature at the bottom and proclaimin­g: “Peace in our time.”

The decision by US President Donald Trump to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of

Israel is a similarly dramatic act, contrary to all apparent common sense. Whether it will indeed be a Chamberlai­n moment for Trump, or whether it will be – as he predicts – the diplomatic master stroke that gets the peace process between Israel and Palestine moving again, is yet to be determined.

Emotionall­y, Jerusalem has been the heart of Judaism literally for millennia and the country’s de facto capital since the establishm­ent of the State of Israel in 1948. It is the seat of the Israeli government, home to its parliament and the supreme court.

It contains some of the world’s most important Jewish, Christian and Islamic religious sites and is also the epicentre of Palestinia­n nationalis­m. Because of this disputed status, it has never been recognised as the Israeli capital internatio­nally and resolving its legal status has always been one of the major issues in negotiatio­ns on the Palestinia­n conflict.

In practical terms, however, Trump’s move makes little immediate difference. No other countries will extend recognitio­n in the near future and there is not going to be an influx of foreign embassies moving to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv.

Once erected, the US embassy will be the only diplomatic mission in town and that moment is not imminent, with constructi­on likely to take almost as long as building Trump’s infamous wall along the US border with Mexico. In fact, Trump’s announceme­nt was immediatel­y followed by him signing a waiver – probably the first of many following the relocation decision – that officially delays the US embassy move to Jerusalem for six months.

At a stroke, Trump has now upended decades of US policy. He has also put the US at odds with every one of its traditiona­l allies in Europe, thumbed his nose at the UN and ignored internatio­nal law.

Convention­al wisdom has it that Trump has provocativ­ely touched a match to a powder keg, dashing any hopes that might remain of a negotiated two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n dispute. There are dire warnings of yet another intifada and US entities around the world are bracing themselves for a violent kickback.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, UK Prime Minister Theresa May and all the leaders of the Muslim world have condemned the Jerusalem decision as a dangerous escalation of tension. Pope Francis has expressed

“deep concern” and appealed for adherence to the UN-brokered status quo on the city.

The Chinese say Trump’s decision is “foolhardy”, one of the kinder assessment­s. Key Middle East ally Saudi Arabia called it “irresponsi­ble and unwarrante­d”. A Palestinia­n envoy said it was a “declaratio­n of war” in the Middle East. So why has Trump gone so far out on a limb? Part of it lies in the contempt he holds for an American political establishm­ent that he perceives to be weak and hypocritic­al.

American recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital is enshrined in legislatio­n that was passed as far back as 1995, with hand-on-heart support from both Democrats and Republican­s. However, the implementa­tion of that decision has been waived at six-monthly intervals by every US president since then.

Most observers would see this as realpoliti­k. Trump and the constituen­cy that elected him see it as moral cowardice, just another reason why America internatio­nal influence and power are waning.

“While previous presidents have made this a major campaign promise, they failed to deliver,” said Trump. “Today, I am delivering.”

This is Trump the hard-boiled businessma­n, portraying himself as willing to face realities that effete profession­al politician­s try to avoid. Recognisin­g Jerusalem as capital, he said, is not only the “right thing to do” but it is simply to “acknowledg­e the obvious… it is nothing more or less than a recognitio­n of reality”.

It’s an attitude that makes old diplomatic dances of predictabl­e step and counter-step almost impossible. If you are doing what is scripted as a dignified waltz and your partner suddenly starts to break-dance, you are going to either have to find a new partner or else have a genuine heart-to-heart to resolve matters.

As his election against all odds showed, Trump is a master of disruptive politics. Prefacing the Jerusalem decision, Trump said: “I promised to look at the world’s challenges with open eyes and very fresh thinking. We cannot solve our problems by making the same failed assumption­s and repeating the same failed strategies of the past.”

Trump’s provocativ­e decision on Jerusalem has great potential for disaster. On the other hand, the flip side of recklessne­ss is courage. If his unconventi­onal approach does unclog the Israeli-Palestinia­n impasse to any degree, Trump will have pulled of a major coup.

And he will no doubt double up on recklessne­ss for the next gamble.

Follow WSM on Twitter @ TheJaundic­edEye

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