What Should Palestinians Expect – Can Trump Be Any Worse?
25 November 2016
By Ramzy Baroud
Fear and trepidation are slowly building up, as US President-elect, Donald
Trump, is fortifying his transitional team with people capable of bringing
about a nightmare scenario, not only for Americans but for the rest of the
world, as well.
For Palestinians, however, the signs are even more ominous. From former New
York mayor, Rudy Giuliani, to Republican leader Newt Gingrich, the Trump team
is filling up with dishonorable men who have made careers out of pandering to
Israeli interests and unabashedly discounting Palestinian rights.
While Gingrich had claimed in 2011 that Palestinians are ''invented'' people,
Giuliani, according to Jewish News Service ''is fondly remembered in the
Jewish community for expelling Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) chief,
Yasser Arafat, from a United Nations concert at Lincoln Center in 1995.''
Considering earlier statements made by Trump himself last May – that the
expansion of illegal Jewish settlements in the Occupied West Bank ''should
keep moving forward'' – to more recent comments by Trump's point person in
Israel, Jason Greenblatt, that the illegal colonies are ''not an obstacle to
peace'', it is fairly certain that the Trump administration is decidedly
anti-peace and anti-Palestinians.
Israeli officials are, of course, rejoicing at the opportunity of working with
such an administration, with Education Minister Naftali Bennet celebrating the
''end of a Palestinian state'' era and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman
inviting Trump to ''coordinate the development'' of the illegal settlements.
But the media forecast for the next four years in US foreign policy towards
Palestine and Israel is also prejudiced. It is true that Trump's prospective
line-up of old politicians is not conducive to the achievement of a just peace
in Palestine by any stretch of the imagination, but presenting the news as if
the prospects of a thriving just peace had existed under the administration of
Barack Obama is simply laughable.
The Obama administration, despite the uneasy relationship between President
Barack Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has been one of the
friendliest and most generous towards Israel. Obama has remained steadfast on
Israel's side as they both fought against Palestinian political aspirations in
international institutions.
Only recently, Obama signed a ''landmark agreement'' by giving Israel $38
billion in military funding, the largest aid package in US history.
So those worried about things getting worse for Palestinians under a Trump
presidency can take comfort in the fact that they already have.
But will this impact the American position towards a Palestinian state?
Not in the least because, again, Obama, like his predecessors fought
tirelessly to prevent a Palestinian state from ever taking form. If a
distinction is to emerge between the Obama and Trump administrations, it is
likely to be manifested in rhetoric, not in action: the former refined and
articulate, the latter belligerent and demagogic. Either way, Palestinians
lose.
In his last speech before the United Nations, Obama dedicated a single
sentence to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict – a sentence that accurately
reflected his failure to positively affect the outcomes of the Middle East's
most protracting, destabilizing conflict.
Both sides would ''be better off if Palestinians reject incitement and
recognize the legitimacy of Israel, but Israel recognizes that it cannot
permanently occupy and settle Palestinian land,'' he said. Nothing more.
While his previous speeches dedicated much rhetoric to the conflict in
Palestine and Israel, the last UN speech – and that sentence alone – was a
more honest indication of eight years that lacked vision, or even a sincere
attempt at finding one.
Over that eight-year period, during which time thousands of innocent people –
the vast majority of whom were Palestinians – were killed, Obama purportedly
labored to achieve the proverbial, although misleading, ''middle ground''. The
outcome of his policies were quite devastating: whereas he sold Palestinians
false hope, he granted Israel most of its needs of military funding and
technology, shielding it from international censure, too.
Moreover, during the last Israeli war on Gaza in 2014 which killed and wounded
thousands, Obama ensured the Israeli army's storage of ammunitions and
military hardware remained at full capacity.
On the political front, he ensured Palestinian efforts aimed at obtaining
recognition for their future state were soundly defeated. He went as far as
denying the UN cultural organisation, UNESCO, from nearly a quarter of its
funding simply for admitting Palestine as a new member.
Yet, some are, naively, hoping that Obama will seek recognition for the State
of Palestine at the UN Security Council in his remaining weeks in the Oval
Office. These hopes have been buoyed by media reports that Obama had
instructed the State Department to develop an ''option menu'' regarding his
vision for a resolution to the conflict.
While Palestinians and their supporters are optimistic that Obama will redeem
himself, even if symbolically, and support the Palestinian push for statehood,
Obama is unlikely to carry out any such steps, especially since Trump is bound
to defeat such initiatives once he moves into the White House.
Additionally, the soon-to-depart president has had eight full years to show
real grit and to take advantage of his first-term popularity to challenge the
pro-Israel lobby and present his country as a truly ''honest broker'' in an
unequal conflict. He could have, at least, sided with the majority of humanity
by adding his country's voice to those that recognize a Palestinian state at
the United Nations.
As of September of last year, 139 of the UN's member states (and two
non-member states) have recognized Palestine. But those recognition remain
largely symbolic as long as the US is unyielding in its rejection of
Palestinian aspirations. An unwavering supporter of Israel, the US is not only
blocking full Palestinian membership at the UN, but is doing its utmost to
prevent 'Palestine' from gaining access to international institutions.
Regardless of what position is to be recommended by the State Department to
Obama in his final days in the White House, the misfortunes of the
Palestinians are unlikely to be reversed overnight, or in the foreseeable
future. Judging from Trump's friendly overtures towards Israel -for example,
inviting Netanyahu and his wife to visit Washington shortly after winning the
elections – the immediate future does not look promising.
History has taught us that, when it comes to US foreign policy towards
Palestine and Israel, things are likely to get worse, not better. Despite the
current chasm within American society, among the media and political elites,
the American love affair with Israel will continue. The ongoing war on
Palestinian rights and aspirations will also linger.
The Palestinian leadership seems unable to understand such an obvious reality.
The Palestinian Authority in Ramallah is either unaware or, perhaps, oblivious
to the fact that its salvation will not arrive from Washington, but from its
ability to navigate the US-Israeli alliance in a resolved and united manner.
Indeed, regardless of what position Obama – or even Trump – may or may not
take, it will have little bearing on the outcome if Palestinians remain
divided. Far more significant than the inflammatory drivel of Gingrich and
Giuliani, Palestinian division and their inability to confront the Israeli
Occupation with one unified and daring strategy is Palestine's greatest, and
most pressing challenge.
– Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for over 20
years. He is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an
author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books
include ''Searching Jenin'', ''The Second Palestinian Intifada'' and his
latest ''My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story''. His website
is www.ramzybaroud.net.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add Comments