How much money would it take for you
to live in a country where you are at best a second class citizen with second
class rights, limited in where you can travel, live, work and how you can vote,
where your faith is considered at best an objectionable and barely tolerated
belief system, out of the mainstream of the state’s official religion, where
you need passes to move within your home country? A better job? $10K/year more?
Never!!!!
They are gathering in Bahrain to begin
Donald Trump’s “money is the solution” Palestinian peace plan. A naïve Jared
Kushner – I could only get into Harvard when my father “donated” $2.6 million –
special. OK, some Arab nations are politely attending the conference, but
everyone knows nothing can or will happen.
“The White House website on Saturday
[6/22] posted a plan to help Palestinians that was described as having the
potential to facilitate more than $50 billion in new investment over 10 years.
Its three initiatives focus on people, economy and government, and could
transform the West Bank and Gaza, according to the plan.
“‘Peace to Prosperity lays out a
vision for a prosperous Palestinian society supported by a robust private
sector, an empowered people, and an effective government,’ the plan says. ‘It
shows what is possible with peace plus investment, and how success is
achievable through specific programs supported by a portfolio of realizable
projects.’” Los Angeles Times, June 23rd. No Palestinian
representatives showed up. Israel, for political reasons, was not invited, but
no worries, their committed representatives, Jared Kusher and U.S. Envoy Jason
Greenblatt, Trump’s special representative for international negotiations, are
there.
And, no, there was no tuchus oyfn tish, money on the table (literally Yiddish for
“ass on the table”), just a willingness by the United States to “facilitate” a
global initiative to raise an average of $5 billion a year for a decade from
the international community for investment in Palestine. But even if there were
an immediate and full $50 billion commitment funded solely by the United
States, the entire notion of bribing a people to give up freedom and dignity
for investment capital is as inane and laughable as it seems. The plan was such
a joke that, well, presenting the specifics has indefinitely been postponed.
“No Palestinian representative, however, will attend the
gathering in Bahrain. Palestinian leadership has boycotted the United States
since Trump’s December 2017 announcement recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s
capital, omitting any reference to Palestinian aspirations to establish the
capital of a future state in East Jerusalem.
“And ultimately, the U.S. did not
invite Israel to the Bahrain gathering… [Greenblatt] said the oft-postponed
Middle East peace plan’s final presentation will be delayed again, ‘probably’
until early November, because of the Israeli electoral calendar. [Right!]
“It is unclear what remains of the ‘ultimate
deal’ for Middle East peace that Trump has been championing since his 2016
campaign, and few observers believe he will risk announcing any major peace
plan during his reelection campaign.
“This is a remarkable denouement for
a policy Trump was singularly focused on even before taking office, when he
appointed Jared Kushner, his son-in-law and protege, to spearhead the plan.
“On Jan. 19, 2017, at an inauguration
eve dinner for top Republican supporters, Trump affectionately turned to
Kushner, who was seated with his wife, Trump’s older daughter, Ivanka, and who
had celebrated his 36th birthday nine days earlier. Trump declared, ‘If you
can't produce peace in the Middle East, nobody can.’
“Two and a half years later, Kushner,
a real estate developer with no previous experience in diplomacy or politics,
has shown no signs of bringing peace to the region. The administration is also
in the midst of heightened tensions with Iran.
“Recent conversations with senior
Palestinian and Israeli officials privy to Kushner’s work indicate that neither
side expects to be provided with an American road map for Middle East peace in
the foreseeable future.
“In separate interviews this month,
Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat and former Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor
Lieberman, both of whom are familiar with the Kushner team’s efforts, told The
Times they believed the initiative was unlikely to advance beyond the Bahrain
workshop.
“‘It will be the biggest
embarrassment for Kushner,’ Erekat said in an hour-long interview in his office
in the West Bank city of Ramallah… ‘We appreciate the [nature of the]
relationship between Kushner and Trump,’ he said, but the workshop is ‘already
a failure.’” LA Times. Understatements of alarming proportions.
With foreign policy being among the
Trump administration’s weakest and least effective efforts, it is equally clear
that the United States has so repositioned itself as “all Netanyahu, all the
time” that it is probably the least likely nation on earth to mediate the
Israeli/Palestinian impasse to a peaceful solution. If anything, the United
States has hardened each side to the crisis, making a real solution that much
more difficult to achieve. If peace ever does come to the region, and don’t
hold your breath, this is definitely not the path.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and the depth of ignorance of the historical facts and political
realities underlying this Trump “peace plan” is staggering.
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