WHY WOULD MOVING THE US EMBASSY TO JERUSALEM BE SO CONTENTIOUS?
Riyadh has spoken out against US
threats to move its diplomatic HQ from Tel Aviv but will the president listen?
Of all the issues at the heart of the
enduring conflict between Israel and the Palestinians, none is as sensitive as
the status of Jerusalem. The holy city has been at the centre of peace-making
efforts for decades. Donald Trump’s approach to it threatens to smash a
long-standing international consensus in a disruptive and dangerous way.
Warnings to Washington from across the
Middle East and beyond have still failed to clarify whether the US will indeed
unilaterally recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and/or carry out Trump’s
controversial campaign promise to transfer the US embassy there from Tel Aviv.
The pressure to refrain from doing either is mounting and widespread. The risks
are high.
Israel routinely describes the city,
with its Jewish, Muslim and Christian holy places, as its “united and eternal”
capital. But its history is inextricably bound up with the bigger picture of
the conflict. Seventy years ago, at the violent end of British rule, when the
UN voted to partition Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, Jerusalem was
defined as a separate entity under international supervision.
Hard facts on the ground dictated
otherwise. In the war of 1948 it was divided, like Berlin in the cold war, into
western and eastern sectors under Israeli and Jordanian control respectively.
Nineteen years later, in June 1967, Israel captured the eastern side, expanded
the city’s boundaries and annexed it – an act that was never recognised
internationally.
Recognition is bound up with larger
questions of territory and peace – and it clashes with Palestinian demands that
East Jerusalem must be the capital of a future independent Palestinian state.
The unequivocal international view, accepted by all previous US
administrations, is that the city’s status must be addressed in negotiations.
Nationalism, religion and security
make for an emotionally freighted issue. Jerusalem’s Jews and Arabs (some 37%
of the total) live largely separate and in many ways segregated lives.
Municipal budgets discriminate against Palestinians, whose residence permits
can be revoked. The separation barrier cuts off some Palestinian areas from the
rest of the city. East Jerusalem’s Palestinian neighbourhoods have become
enclaves surrounded by the post-1967 Jewish ones, with little contact with each
other.
The Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif,
adjacent to the Western Wall, remains highly volatile. In July widespread
protests erupted after Israeli Arab gunmen killed two Israeli policemen and the
authorities installed metal detectors in a way that was interpreted as
breaching the status quo. Nightmare scenarios about escalation often begin in
Jerusalem.
Saeb Erakat, the veteran PLO
negotiator, has warned that a change in the US stance would mean it was
“disqualifying itself to play any role in any initiative towards achieving a
just and lasting peace”. King Abdullah of Jordan highlighted the danger that
the move could be “exploited by terrorists to stoke anger, frustration and
desperation in order to spread their ideologies”. The Islamist movement Hamas
has threatened a new intifada.
In theory, Trump could recognise
Jerusalem as the capitals of both Israel and Palestine. That would underline
the commitment of the US to a two-state solution – which has been in doubt
since his inauguration in January. But it seems highly unlikely in the light of
intensifying talk about the elements of Trump’s “deal of the century” to
resolve the conflict.
Nothing has been announced officially,
but leaks point to a key role for Saudi Arabia, which is reportedly pressing
the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, to accept a peace plan that would
involve Palestinian control of disconnected enclaves in the West Bank – dotted
with illegal Israeli settlements – and make do with the East Jerusalem suburb
of Abu Dis, beyond the separation barrier, as a capital. Trump’s son-in-law,
Jared Kushner, is said to have worked this out with the Saudi crown prince,
Mohammed bin Salman.
Trump seems to have identified Bin
Salman as committed to internal reform, confrontation with Iran and to securing
Israeli-Palestinian peace. If Washington cares about the view from Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia’s public statement on Tuesday that it opposes US recognition of
Jerusalem as Israel’s capital may help prevent this needlessly provocative move
from taking place – at least for now.
No comments