Jerusalem embassy: An American irresponsible move can trigger humanitarian crisis
12/12/17
U.S.
President Donald Trump’s move to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital on
Wednesday brought global criticism, with some countries urging Washington to
reverse course. Standing in the White House Diplomatic Reception room with Vice
President Mike Pence behind him, Trump said that “today, we finally
acknowledge the obvious: that Jerusalem is Israel’s capital”.
Right
after Trump’s declaration, hundreds of angry Palestinians took to the streets
to denounce Trump. Demonstrators burned tires in the towns of Beit Hanoun in
the northern Gaza Strip, across Gaza City and in the southern Gaza Strip’s
towns of Khan Younis and Rafah.Protests were also reported in Turkey, and
images circulated online of demonstrations breaking out throughout the region.
The
international community does not recognize Israeli sovereignty over the entire
city, believing its status should be resolved in negotiations. No other country
has its embassy in Jerusalem.
Important
U.S. allies in Europe and the Middle East such as Britain, France, Germany and
Saudi Arabia criticized Trump over his decision and questioned the
wisdom of such a move, both prior to and following the announcement.
Saudi Arabia’s Royal Court issued a statement Thursday, calling
the decision “dangerous” and
“irresponsible.” Similar
concerns were voiced
by the United Arab Emirates.
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel responded to the pronouncement on Wednesday evening,
saying that the “German government does not support this position, because the
status of Jerusalem is to be resolved in the framework of a two-state
solution,” according to a tweet by her spokesman.
Her
words were echoed by French President Emmanuel Macron, who
criticized the move as “a regrettable decision that France
does not approve of and goes against international law and all the resolutions
of the U.N. Security Council.”
British
Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson similarly indicated that such a
move could further disrupt efforts to reach peace in the region.
In
the Netherlands, criticism of Trump was unusually strong. “We think it’s
an unwise step and a counterproductive step. If we want to solve at some moment
the conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis, we need a two-state
solution, and a one-sided step is not going to help,” Dutch Foreign Minister
Halbe Zijlstra said in an interview.
Perhaps
the strongest warning came out of Sweden, where Foreign
Minister Margot Wallström said the changes are “obviously
going to lead to massive effects and unease.” “It’s catastrophic,” Wallström
said.
“This
step is prejudging, dictating, closing doors for negotiations and I think
President Trump tonight disqualified the United States of America to play any
role in any peace process,” said Saeb Erekat, the main Palestinian peace
negotiator.
That
may be why Arab leaders, even key U.S. allies, protested the move so strongly,
knowing the president’s move won’t play well among their populations. Turkey’s
top diplomat, Mevlut Cavusoglu, was unsparing in criticism that was far harsher
than any the U.S. is accustomed to from a NATO ally.
“The
whole world is against this,” Cavusoglu told reporters as he awaited
Tillerson’s arrival for their meeting. He said he had already told Trump’s
chief diplomat that it was a “grave mistake.” Cavusoglu said he planned to
“tell him again.”
Indonesia
joined a chorus of criticism from Muslim-majority countries, with Foreign
Minister Retno Marsudi saying that Indonesians “condemn” the decision.
“Democracy means respecting the international law, (and) the recognition does
not respect various U.N. Security Council resolutions,” Retno said at a
democracy forum in Jakarta while wearing a Palestinian scarf. “As a democratic country,
the U.S. should know what democracy means,” she said.
The
rebukes, made at an emergency Security Council meeting called over Mr. Trump’s
announcement, constituted an extraordinarily public denunciation of American
policy on the world’s most prominent diplomatic stage, leaving the United
States alone on the issue among the council’s 15 members.
One
by one, the ambassadors of Sweden, Egypt, Britain, France and Bolivia, among
others, reiterated their view that President Trump’s announcement had subverted
the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a longtime bedrock
of the United Nations position on resolving it. The ambassadors of Britain,
France, Sweden, Germany and Italy issued a joint statement outside the
council’s chambers condemning their American ally’s change of position, saying
it was “not in line
with Security Council resolutions and was unhelpful in terms of
prospects for peace in the region.”
“This
is a dangerous precedent,” the Egyptian ambassador said. “These are the
resolutions of the Security Council.” He said the resolutions constitute “the
law that governs the status of Jerusalem. All countries have pledged, according
the U.N. charter, to implement and abide by it.”
Pope
Francis voiced "profound concern" over the move, making a
"heartfelt appeal to make everyone's commitment to respect the status quo
of the city, in accordance with the relevant United Nations resolutions."
Critics
have said that recognizing Israel’s claim to Jerusalem without acknowledging a
Palestinian claim broke with international consensus and prejudged the outcome
of any negotiations.
There
are fears Trump's action will trigger violence against Americans and US
interests and a wider Middle East conflagration, especially in countries where
leaders support the US government. The US Consulate in Jerusalem warned
Americans to be wary of demonstrations after Palestinian factions called for
"three days of rage" across the West Bank.
"These
procedures do also help in the extremist organizations to wage a religious war
that would harm the entire region, which is going through critical moments and
would lead us into wars that will never end, which we have warned about and
always urged to fight against," Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said
in a televised address following the US announcement.
"President
Trump tonight made the biggest mistake of his life," Erekat told CNN's
Christiane Amanpour. "Instead of encouraging the parties to sit together,
the parties to put all core issues including Jerusalem on the table and
negotiate in good faith, he dictates."./.
All comments [ 4 ]
The move is in full disregard of all international resolutions concerning Occupied Jerusalem and reveals the absolute US bias towards Israel and is a nail in the coffin of the already stalled negotiations process between the Palestinians and the Israelis.
It will likely throw "fuel on the fire" and lead to a new escalation in the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. U.S. always claims itself as human rights protector, but it turns out that they just protect Israel, their ally.
It is irresponsible and will cause a "drastic regression in the efforts to move the peace process forward and catastrophia to the region and the world.
The US decision is against all international treaties and decisions which recognise Israel as an occupying power, which highlights the fact that US disrespects the international legitimacy.
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