IRAN DARES TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
The first phase of the Trump administration’s long-awaited peace plan for Israel and Palestine has been rolled out to scepticism, anger and outright derision.
A
conference hall of regional officials – with no Israelis or Palestinians
present – was the first to hear details of the US-brokered deal, an economic
blueprint that shreds decades of diplomacy and which even its mooted financial
backers seemed reluctant to embrace.
The
centrepiece appears to be a call for donors to contribute $50bn to kickstart
the Palestinian economy and win the buy-in of neighbouring Jordan, Egypt and
Lebanon, which would eventually open direct trade links with the West Bank and
Gaza.
There
has been no sign of a political dimension to the proposal, hailed as the
brainchild of Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner. Critics
across the region suggested the US was replacing the long-agreed “land for
peace” formula with a blunt new “money for peace” that attempted to buy off the
Palestinian cause.
Kushner
said his plan was “the opportunity of the century” for the Palestinians but
their acceptance was a precondition for peace.
“Agreeing on an economic pathway forward is a necessary precondition to resolving the previously unsolvable political issues,” he said. “To be clear, economic growth and prosperity for the Palestinian people are not possible without an enduring and fair political solution to the conflict – one that guarantees Israel’s security and respects the dignity of the Palestinian people.”
“Agreeing on an economic pathway forward is a necessary precondition to resolving the previously unsolvable political issues,” he said. “To be clear, economic growth and prosperity for the Palestinian people are not possible without an enduring and fair political solution to the conflict – one that guarantees Israel’s security and respects the dignity of the Palestinian people.”
Acknowledging
the scepticism about his father-in-law’s policy in the region, he said: “My
direct message to the Palestinian people is that despite what those who have
let you down in the past say, President Trump and America have not given up on
you.”
Nancy
Okail, the executive director of the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy,
said: “The Palestinian issue is primarily political, and pouring money into it
won’t solve it. Kushner’s plan is indicative of his lack of understanding of
the history and dynamics in the region, offering a simplistic and unviable,
immoral non-solution to a longstanding, complex issue.”
Hours
before the official “Peace to Prosperity” conference dinner in the Bahraini
capital, Manama, on Tuesday, Saudi Arabia released a statement reiterating its
support for the two-state solution. This has been the bedrock of past
discussions between Israelis and Palestinians, underwritten by successive
administrations in Riyadh and Washington.
Saudi
Arabia is an ally of the Trump administration and a nominal supporter of the
conference. Its crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, had forged a close
understanding with Kushner in the months before the conference; both are
understood to see the 71-year-old conflict through a similar lens.
During
Kushner’s time as Trump’s Middle East envoy, core demands of the Israeli
rightwing have been implemented. US aid to Palestine has been slashed, the
bitterly contested city of Jerusalem declared as Israel’s capital, Palestinian
diplomatic missions closed in Washington and US missions closed in the West
Bank and Gaza.
“We’ve
gone from a ‘land for peace’ formula addressing a decades-old occupation and
siege to a ‘money for peace’ recipe for disaster,” said HA Hellyer, a senior
associate fellow of the Royal United Services Institute and the Atlantic
Council.
“The
needs and rights of the Palestinians – the occupied – are now openly and
explicitly disregarded by the Trump administration with such transparency that such
a ‘money for peace’ recipe for disaster [to them] is a logical conclusion,”
Hellyer said.
“There
are precious few in the Arab world who are willing to invest much political
capital to address and solve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, but that doesn’t
translate to support for this. If that were the case, we would see high-level
delegations, for example, going to the Bahraini workshop. Instead, Arab states
are trying to send as low-level diplomats as possible.”
Sir
John Jenkins, a former Middle East director for the Foreign Office, said torpor
across Palestinian politics had contributed to a loss of faith in the existing
peace model.
He
said Palestine’s political structure had collapsed and there was “no
Palestinian national narrative any more”, pointing to the “bureaucratisation
and demoralisation of Fatah”, the “futilely belligerent” Hamas in charge of
Gaza, and the fact that the Palestinian Authority that runs parts of the West
Bank was “widely distrusted and despised as corrupt by many Palestinians”.
Jenkins
said: “Add to this the failure of the Arab uprisings, the consequent
discrediting of political Islamism, the collapse of Arab nationalism and the
rise of securitised authoritarianism, and the old context within which the
Palestinian national cause sat has also vanished. No one has replaced it with
anything satisfactory. This is a failure of the political imagination.”
He
said this vacuum had been filled with “the promise of economic development, as
if that will make the unorganised but still widespread and powerful Palestinian
yearning for a state, or at least a political community, go away. I think
that’s a misreading. Economic development gets you so far – but then what?”
He
added of mooted Arab benefactors: “I can’t see them simply signing on the
dotted line unless there is some sort of political horizon. The Palestinian
issue retains a distinctive power to mobilise many Arabs emotionally. It’s hard
to see why the Kurds and others are allowed to realise national aspirations but
not the Palestinians. And Iran would accuse them of selling out the instant
they signed. Why give them the satisfaction?”
Hellyer
said a two-state solution, already diluted, may become even less viable in the
absence of meaningful political engagement. “If the Israelis continue along
this present course of action, they make the alternative of a one-state
solution more and more inevitable, where the Palestinian struggle for national
self-determination in a state is transformed into a civil rights struggle in a
single state alongside Israelis.”
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