Draining the swamp:Richard Baehr

http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=17913

In the final months of the presidential campaign, a popular refrain at Donald Trump rallies, ‎second only perhaps to “Lock Her Up,” was “Drain the Swamp.” The chant ‎ostensibly referred to clearing out the bureaucratic/lobbyist control over the ‎federal government, which had resulted in a government committed to serving the ‎needs of the protected few at the expense of the unprotected many and ‎debilitating America’s future growth prospects in the process.‎

There is no reason, however, why the term should not apply equally to the stale ‎thinking that has permeated diplomacy in the Middle East for decades, enabling ‎nonsensical beliefs to remain accepted and unchallenged. The fierce reaction to ‎the announcement that Trump adviser David Friedman will be the next ambassador to Israel is ‎evidence that among those who have actively participated in perpetuating failure ‎in the supposed Israeli-Palestinian peace process there are many now worried ‎about their jobs, their influence, or worse — that common sense, if given an ‎outlet and applied to the region, may produce something outside the allowed set ‎of acceptable policies to which they have adhered for so long.‎

In “Ike’s Gamble,” Michael Doran’s excellent book on the Eisenhower administration’s fumbling and errors ‎in the Middle East, Doran quotes Britain’s then-Prime Minister Winston Churchill in ‎considering why American policy in the region was such a mess. Referring to ‎U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, Churchill said: “He was clever ‎enough to be stupid on a rather large scale.”

It would be hard to find a more apt ‎description for the thinking of New Yorker Editor David Remnick, New York Times columnists, or J Street spokespeople in their sustained ‎apoplectic states since the Trump election victory, now reinforced by the Friedman ‎nomination. These people will always make the same arguments, and draw the ‎same conclusions, regardless of the facts, so their current panic mode is not a ‎surprise. ‎

 

 

It is worth examining some of the long-running issues that Trump and Friedman should move on, ‎which really belong in the dustbin of history. ‎

Jerusalem: The U.S. Embassy belongs in Jerusalem. In 1995, when Bill Clinton was president, Congress passed the ‎Jerusalem Embassy Act, which called ‎for the embassy to be moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem but provided a waiver for ‎the president to delay the move due to political or diplomatic considerations. ‎Presidents Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama chose to make use of the waiver each year of ‎their presidency, though each had campaigned promising to accomplish the move. ‎Ambassador-designate Friedman has been clear that he expects to perform his ‎duties from Jerusalem, perhaps starting work in the U.S. consulate in the city.‎

In the last few years, the Obama administration challenged the attempt by an ‎American born in Jerusalem to add Israel to the birthplace on his passport. The Supreme Court sided with the White House. Jerusalem, as seen by official Washington, ‎might as well be on the planet Xenon, in some far away galaxy, since it stands apart ‎from any country. The waivers have been exercised every year because of fear that if the White House ever decided to really move the embassy, all hell would ‎break loose with the Palestinians and their Arab and Muslim allies. ‎

The reality is that when Israel was admitted to the United Nations, it had de ‎facto borders (the 1949 armistice lines), that even if not settled with its neighbors, ‎clearly included its capital city of Jerusalem. Maintaining an embassy in a city that ‎is not a country’s capital is something not done in any other country in the ‎world. Refusing to recognize that Jerusalem is Israel’s capital until the Palestinians ‎give their approval in essence allows them to define the terms for Israel’s ‎capital.

Will the Arab world go ballistic if the United States makes this move, or are ‎there bigger problems for them to deal with at the moment for which they may ‎need American assistance? This is a swamp that needs to be drained only once.‎

Palestinians and the peace process: The peace processors believe that the ‎Palestinians are committed to a two-state solution. The fact that they have repeatedly rejected the ‎concept, when offered in the 1937 Peel Commission plan, the partition resolution in 1947, at Camp David and Taba in 2000-2001, and again by then-‎Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in 2008, is evidence that the belief is ludicrous. What ‎concessions would Israel have had to make to get a deal done? Every American ‎government since the Jimmy Carter administration has found time to criticize Israel for settlement ‎construction or expansion. This has been offered up by the West as the ‎explanation (excuse) for the apparent Palestinian unwillingness even to meet to ‎discuss an agreement for most of the history of the conflict, though most of the ‎announced settlement activity was within the boundaries of existing settlements.‎

All one needs to know to understand Palestinian intentions ‎is their decades of commitment to “resistance,” better described as violence and ‎terrorist attacks against Jews to keep the pressure pot boiling. But the proof of the ‎real intransigence is their commitment to a refugee right of return. The United ‎Nations recognizes the Palestinian refugees as unique. They have their own U.N. ‎agency, and refugee status is passed on to future generations, which is not the case ‎for any other refugee population in the world, which now number over 60 million. There are currently perhaps 50,000 Palestinian refugees from the ‎‎1948-1949 war, but the Palestinians claim a number more than 100 times that size, and they keep a sizable number in squalid ‎conditions generation after generation in U.N.-administered camps in the Gaza Strip, the ‎West Bank, and several Arab countries. The Palestinians have ‎chosen to sacrifice the lives of one generation after another to a welfare ‎dependency in which the only thing taught is grievance and hatred of Israel, so as ‎to perpetuate the myth of a giant ethnic cleansing to be reversed when Israel is ‎destroyed and the refugees return. ‎

If the Palestinians were committed to a two-state solution, as opposed to a ‎Palestinian state in place of Israel, the UNWRA camps would be dismantled and the ‎people could finally be allowed to get on with their lives. Of all the refugee ‎populations created in the last 100 years, one could make a case that things should ‎have been easier for the Arabs who fled the War of Independence (many implored ‎to do so by other Arab countries). They wound up in places where their hosts ‎spoke their language, practiced the same religion, and were ethnically and ‎culturally similar. It was a lot more difficult for the larger population of Jews driven ‎out of the Arab world in the same time period who moved to ‎Israel, and faced a new language, different culture, and difficult absorption issues, given the doubling of the population.‎

To drain this swamp, the new administration can make clear that the United States ‎will no longer subsidize the Palestinian Authority honoring killers or making payments to the ‎families of killers, and that it will no longer pay a penny for UNWRA. Instead, the U.S. ‎can demand that U.N. refugee policy for the Palestinians be brought into line ‎with the policy toward every other refugee population. If the Palestinians ‎are committed to a two-state solution, they can prove it by ending the ‎encouragement and sponsorship of Jew-killing, and stop perpetuating the myth of ‎an enormous refugee population that needs to be accommodated in Israel.‎

Truth-telling at the United Nations is part of draining the swamp, probably the ‎biggest and most fetid swamp of them all, where Jew hatred is rampant, and the destruction of a member state is for ‎all practical purposes official organization policy. ‎

Trump and Friedman seem to be ready to do away with the nonsense that has been official policy for years. The louder the ‎fools scream in protest, the better the job the new team in town is doing to drain ‎the swamp.

Richard Baehr is the co-founder and chief political correspondent for the American Thinker and a fellow at the Jewish Policy Center.

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