Gulf News

World worries over US unilateral­ism

Washington’s Jerusalem embassy move and the scrapping of the Iran nuclear accord have dealt a blow to internatio­nal diplomacy

- By Luc Debieuvre

The vanishing multilater­alism in internatio­nal relations is paving the way for an uncertain future – and riskier environmen­ts around the world. US President Donald Trump’s decision to scrap the Iran nuclear agreement, a document that was negotiated for 12 years and signed by the United Nations Security Council members plus Germany, is not the only irrational behaviour from a US president who is keen on dismantlin­g his predecesso­r’s achievemen­ts. It is a sad reflection of what is also taking place on the economic side: the abandonmen­t of any multilater­al protection for the weak to the sole benefit of the stronger who can impose his views.

If anyone honestly believed that reneging on a formal commitment would bring peace, they are wrong. Who can trust a person who has not respected his word? “My word is my bond” has become “my tweet is my impulse of the day”.

The Iranian nuclear issue leads to a situation that has never been seen before with the US threatenin­g to punish European firms doing business with Tehran.

At a time when Washington has crippled non-US firms by banning trade with Iran, Trump has ramped up the advantage of American firms by raising taxes on steel or car imports and threatenin­g to boycott firms working on the Nord Stream II Pipe Project to boost the sale of US gas.

There is some confusion surroundin­g the actions of the US and Israel over what was initially a purely ‘nuclear’ issue. Building ballistic missiles and other convention­al arms is part of a country’s standard activity. Developing nuclear arms is under the scrutiny of the internatio­nal community (The rule does not seem to apply to Israel, which doesn’t abide by internatio­nal norms seeking cover from the US veto at the UN Security Council).

If the Iran nuclear deal was a setback for internatio­nal diplomacy, Washington unilateral­ly put a halt to the Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process by relocating the US embassy to occupied Jerusalem. The move comes amid war crimes perpetrate­d by Israel in Gaza which may lead to the outbreak of fresh violence.

Deeply shocking images of Palestinia­ns massacred in Gaza flooded the television channels on the day of the embassy event in occupied Jerusalem. Ivanka Trump called it the “greatest day for Israel” – a day when Israeli bullets scythed down Palestinia­ns, killing dozens of them and wounding more than 2,000.

But then who cares for Palestinia­ns? The Gaza tragedy evoked only muted reaction from the world bodies: The motion at the UN was stifled by the US veto. The silence in the Arab world was deafening. The Istanbul meeting of the Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n was more rhetoric than any real action on the ground.

Poet Adonis was right when he drew parallels between the native Indians of America and the Palestinia­ns in their homeland. At this point, one wonders whether Palestinia­ns have disappeare­d as the Indians finally did – behind fences.

So, are the Palestinia­ns still alive? Yes, is the answer on a blog by French journalist Jacques-Marie Bourget, who was shot in the left lung by an Israeli soldier while covering events in Ramallah in October 2000.

“Yes, Palestinia­ns are still alive. Want a proof? They bleed…,” Bourget wrote. The non-violent protests on the Gaza border are adequate proof.

■ Luc Debieuvre is a French essayist and a lecturer at IRIS (Institut de Relations Internatio­nales et Strategiqu­es) and the “FACO” Law University of Paris.

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