8. Trump / Kushner’s
one-sided peace proposal opened the door to Israel’s
annexation of 30% of the West Bank. It was a veil of insincerity that Kushner thought he could broker. If anyone believed that the negotiated "peace plan" was real, they were just naive.
(a) ...
(b) Trump’s faulty approach to the Israel-Palestinian peace process have set the stage where at the G-20, at EU, and within ASEAN, no diplomat from these countries can undertake any initiative to support Israel’s borderline illegal actions in the last 6 months (prior to the latest evictions as a trigger event) — understood correctly, Trump and Netanyahu degraded Israel’s security, not enhanced it.
I personally believe Trump's approach was correct. All his predecessors had tried the same approach, and always failed miserably.
The principles by which the Trump admin went, which were absent before him:
1. Integrate the Arab world into the peace deal, and recognize the Arab League's influence on the Palestinians.
2. Separate the Palestinian peace process from the Arab League peace process.
His actions therefore resulted in:
1. A map that was vastly different from any of the previous failed maps, which were all nearly identical.
2. His map also addressed the pressing Palestinian issues of development of Gaza, and a land bridge between the two Palestinian territories.
3. He also addressed pressing Palestinian issues outside Palestine, such as the ongoing humanitarian crisis in refugee camps, primarily in Syria.
4. Pressure from all sponsors of Palestine to accept the plan, which were its only allies.
5. A row of peaceful gestures, diplomatic ties formation, and outright peace treaties with Israel, because Arab states could paint Palestine as a chronic rejectionist to sell the new agreements to the public.
6. The section that allowed Israel to annex West Bank territory right away was effectively used to get peace with the UAE. I believe it was done with that intent.
The PA boycotted the peace plan long before any details even emerged. But the end result is that there's more pressure than ever before on Palestine to accept a peace treaty.
(a) This means that the conditions are so unbalanced that to bring the Palestinians back to the negotiating table, big concessions from Israel is required.
That was true if Israel and Palestine are equals. But Israel is the stronger state, and it has legal legitimacy to do whatever it pleases to advance its own interests. If the Palestinians want to get something, they need to try to convince Israel to negotiate.
You don't try to negotiate equal terms from a position of weakness.
Right now they and the international community are banking on Israel as a democratic and western state with shared values, to make big concessions because it would be the humane thing to do. But there's no guarantee that this will remain forever. Israel's government has moved from the political left to right and now steering to center, but the dynamic range was always very small. One Israeli government can be a right wing one with some dominant extremist beliefs, which is possible for one such to remain in power even if briefly. In which case this assumption of equal terms will be thrown out the window. The Palestinian leadership is playing a dangerous game of gambling with the interests of Israel.
Right now, due to this war, some factions of Arab Israelis are rioting and one city (Lod) has called a state of emergency and brought in military forces.
This provides fuel to an already unstable political situation where extremists are abusing the legal mess to get in.
The Israeli center was making baby steps for years to overthrow the religious right coalition, but this war reverses a lot of progress.
We have seen reports of Israeli far right and extreme Ultra Orthodox Jewish groups being involved in the street rioting and it's been suggested that they may have initiated it. According to independent reports these groups were broadcasting their intent prior to Jerusalem Day. If that is indeed the case, then maybe it's about time that those groups are restrained and held accountable for their actions. I know that this will be politically unacceptable but a line does have to be drawn.
Indeed, violence erupted because of religious clashes. It was a convergence of the Islamic Ramadan and the Jewish-secular Jerusalem Day, to which religious folk give more weight.
Enflaming factors are a series of settler provocations and one Palestinian deadly terror attack plus one foiled mega attack, and above those stood the issue of Sheikh Jarrah.
Contrary to popular belief, Sheikh Jarrah is a civil dispute, not a government one.
Various Israeli and Palestinian groups are claiming rights to certain real estate on the basis of ottoman laws and deeds of ownership. Since Israel inherited both Ottoman laws and legal documents (and British) to protect local populations from unjust legal actions, every land dispute is a legal mess. Every party tries to grasp at legal straws to win, because documentation barely exists. It usually exists privately, validated by legal experts, but not every owner makes the decision to keep them, or even properly preserve them.
I'm not keen on the details, but if one party wins the legal battle, the government becomes responsible to evict the losing party. There are of course some legal measures taken to protect people from such abuses - for example those in Sheikh Jarrah were given the option to just keep paying rent, but after 12 years they stopped, and then the state decided to evict them. And yeah, this issue began in 2009.
Anyway, this all created a very tense feeling even before the Temple Mount clashes began.
The Israeli police responded very quickly, and found and stopped several busloads of orthodox Jews on their way to Jerusalem, making headlines. But you can't really do this in an organized way in the Palestinian side, so one of the bloodthirsty groups is under-staffed, creating a rather one sided clash.
When it's orthodox Jews vs police, it's usually a water cannon, some beatings, some arrests, and that's it. But when it's Palestinians vs police, the "vibe" is far more confrontational, and so violence escalates until the police starts shooting tear gas, and in extreme cases even rubber bullets.
This contributed to the continuation of violence.
All factors together have created a very fertile political ground for Hamas to start firing rockets.
It is my personal belief that Hamas doesn't care the slightest about the Palestinians, so its attacks have not actually resulted from frustration.
I also note that Ultra Orthodox adherents are exempt from service in the IDF and to me that is just patently wrong. It's a requirement of citizenship that you serve your country as well. They expect to be protected from the heathens but won't lift a finger to protect themselves, yet they are happy to incite the troubles. If that's the case tax them twice the amount non Ultra Orthodox are taxed - make them pay for the privilege.
I am an atheist and believe in a separation of state and religion. Therefore I share your opinion that beliefs should not make one exempt from military service, unless it's a philosophical thing (e.g a pacifist). Adding to your point above, there is no political boundary to having the police clash with the ultra orthodox. It happens very often. And not only with them but also various factions of settlers, religious nationalists, and more.
The religious parties don't make too much of a fuss about it.
They do have enough control over the government to give them a free pass in some things, which is why I always vote against anyone who might sit with them. But when it comes to actual security concerns they don't get any free pass.
It is my belief that you will have to clean house before you can advance towards some sort of arrangement with the Palestinians. There are radicals and extremists on both sides and all that you have achieved in the last 20 years is made the Palestinians hate you even more and given Hamas an entry and a strong foothold.
Hamas rose to power because the PA was considered far too corrupt (ironic, huh?), and also because they were okay with waging a civil war against a rival militia (Fatah) to cement their status.
It has nothing to do with Israeli politics, IMO.
It's kind of like North Korea - the people know the government is shit, but they don't have any means to resist. They can only abide, or attempt an escape which results in multi-generational executions.
What you said is also true in reverse. The conflict with Palestinians fuels hatred which in turn gives rise to extremist factions in Israel. And because in Israel there are actually elections, it matters.