The Foolish Embassy Expectations Game
By Jonathan S. Tobin/JNS.org May 16, 2017 Share this article:
When President Donald Trump heads to the Middle East later this
month, the world will be primarily watching closely to see if he makes
any of his trademark gaffes that set off a cultural land mine in Saudi
Arabia or Israel.
But the more important question is whether he will use the trip to actually make policy.
The
expectation is that at some point during his visit, Trump will announce
the convening of a new Middle East summit. Trump appears to believe in
the "outside-in" approach to peace talks, in which Arab states like
Saudi Arabia would play a role in trying to encourage and even muscle
the Palestinians into negotiating in good faith with Israel at a peace
conference.
But whether or not that dubious
plan is put into action, Trump's presence in Jerusalem is also being
scrutinized for any hint that the U.S. is prepared to acknowledge his
stay at the King David Hotel will be time spent in Israel's capital.
Though
Trump repeatedly pledged during the 2016 campaign he would move the
U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, it hasn't happened yet.
It's
still possible he could do it, perhaps even when he's there only a day
before Israel celebrates Jerusalem Day--which this year marks the 50th
anniversary of the city's reunification during the Six-Day War. But few
in the know think this is going to happen.
In recent weeks, Trump has been listening to his more
mainstream advisers such as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and
Secretary of Defense James Mattis. This has led him to take a more
realistic attitude toward NATO, Russia and the conflict in Syria.
It's
also likely to mean he will heed their warnings that an embassy move
would set off riots in the Muslim world rivaling those occurring in
reaction to a Danish newspaper publishing cartoons of the Prophet
Mohammed. That's a price that not even a Trump may be willing to pay to
keep a promise.
If so, then those pro-Israel
activists who pushed hard to pin down Trump on the embassy issue last
year will probably write it off as just a noble effort that failed.
But
by putting the question of Jerusalem's status back on the national
agenda and then failing, they will have made a mistake that could set
back Israel's cause and boost efforts to re-partition the capital.
The
effort to move the embassy was once a mainstream Jewish obsession and
resulted in numerous Democratic and Republican party platform pledges
about recognizing the reality of a united Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
But after the promise was repeatedly broken, the pro-Israel community
got the hint and stopped asking.
Nor was it
something the Israeli government was demanding. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu would be delighted if Trump were to do as he promised, but the
location of the U.S. embassy ranks low on the list of the Israeli
leader's priorities.
Netanyahu is far more
interested in getting Trump to put pressure on the Palestinian Authority
to stop inciting and paying for terrorism, and to understand its
leader, Mahmoud Abbas, has neither the will nor the ability to ever make
peace.
Keeping Trump focused on the Iranian
threat is also more important to Netanyahu than where the U.S.
ambassador spends his workday.
But, like it or not, raising the stakes on the embassy
could make Trump's unremarkable decision to emulate his predecessors
look like a defeat for Israel.
If the
president appears in Jerusalem in the very week when its reunification
is being celebrated without acknowledging he rejects the longstanding
legal fiction that the city is not Israeli territory, it will be
perceived as a setback that might ensure the embassy is never moved.
This
will be more than just bad PR for Israel. The world's refusal to accept
that even the parts of the city that were inside the 1967 lines make up
Israel's capital is more than an annoyance.
It lends undeserved credence to the Palestinian propaganda campaign to deny the city's Jewish heritage.
It's
also an essential element of a dogma impelling the Palestinians to
refuse to recognize the legitimacy of a Jewish state no matter where its
borders are drawn.
That's why Israel's
friends are correct to want the U.S. to make a statement that the days
of ignoring Palestinian intransigence and hatred are over.
But
sometimes tactics are as important as strategy. Right now, what friends
of Israel need the most is for Trump to understand the truth about
Abbas and his Hamas rivals' refusal to make peace.
Yet
by raising expectations about the embassy that are bound to be
disappointed, they may hand Israel's foes an unearned and tragically
important victory.
Originally published at JNS.org - reposted with permission.
No comments:
Post a Comment