The Jewish Chronicle

Middle East is less secure with Trump

- BYJONATHAN­RYNHOLD

UNDER PRESIDENT Trump there may well be less friction between the US and Israel’s right-wing government. However, in an underlying sense, Israel will be less secure. There are two major reasons for this: first, Mr Trump’s temperamen­t; and second, his isolationi­st instincts.

Mr Trump appears to be erratic; not a personalit­y trait one looks for in the supreme commander of the US armed forces. The American constituti­on divides power between the president, Congress and the Supreme Court. But when it comes to foreign policy, the president is dominant. If Mr Trump listens to experience­d advisers, this could help matters. However, during the campaign, many Republican foreign policy experts, especially those that are pro-Israel, stated publicly that they would not serve under Mr Trump, who they view as reckless and abhorrent. On the other hand, as one such expert explained to me a couple of months ago, if Mr Trump actually became president that would put them in a dilemma, as some would feel a duty to serve in order to protect the republic from disaster.

On the substance of policy, Mr Trump has flip-flopped so often that one cannot be sure what his position is on any given subject. As one senior Republican senator told me when I enquired about his foreign policy: “I got nothing for you.”

The two policy issues at the core of US-Israeli relations will be Iran and the Palestinia­ns. On Iran, Mr Trump has been clear that he thinks Barack Obama did a bad nuclear deal; however he has been less clear on what he intends to do about this. During the campaign he spoke both of cancelling and renegotiat­ing the deal and enforcing it in a tough manner, though the latter has been the dominant theme.

Notably, unlike many Republican­s in Congress, and other Republican presidenti­al candidates, he did not formally pledge to rip up the deal.

On the Israeli-Palestinia­n track, Mr Trump began by stating that he would give resolving the conflict “one hell of a shot”, with the US in the role of a neutral broker and that he would not commit to recognisin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. However, Mr Trump subsequent­ly reversed his neutrality and his position on Jerusalem. In addition, his advisers are now stating that he is not committed to the two-state solution, and that peace-making is not a priority. Regarding settlement­s, Mr Trump’s advisers have stated that he would not dictate where Israel can and cannot build. These later positions are in tune with attitudes among rank and file Republican­s and if they were enacted would make for a significan­t reduction in tension over the issue with the Israeli government. However, it would also make the Palestinia­ns disgruntle­d, which might further weaken the relatively moderate PA, with negative consequenc­es for Israeli-Palestinia­n security co-operation.

Despite the fact that Mrs Clinton’s positions on the Palestinia­ns are more challengin­g for Mr Netanyahu than those of Mr Trump, the Prime Minister refrained from signalling a preference. In contrast, in 2012 he tacitly endorsed the Republican candidate, Mitt Romney. This attests to concerns about Mr Trump’s reliabilit­y, which have already affected Israeli policy regarding US military aid.

In March, Mr Trump flirted with cutting aid to Israel, though in September he referred to aid to Israel as “an investment”. His advisers now claim that he would look favourably on providing more aid to Israel than mandated by Mr Obama’s $38 billion, 10-year aid package. Yet part of the reason the risk-averse Mr Netanyahu signed the aid agreement with Mr Obama, despite the fact that it grants aid on less favourable terms than previously, was concern that President Trump could not be relied upon on this issue.But US aid constitute­s only one per cent of Israel’s GDP. Far more significan­t is the foreign policy strategy that Mr Trump intends to pursue. This is where there is the greatest cause for concern.

Israel benefits hugely from an internatio­nalist and assertive America. When the US takes a step back, as it did

 ??  ?? Aftermath of a Russian strike on Aleppo. Trump has indicated he will give Putin free rein in Syria
Aftermath of a Russian strike on Aleppo. Trump has indicated he will give Putin free rein in Syria
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