From The Hill, 26 November 2016, by Gregg Roman:
... there
is growing speculation that President Obama will spring a diplomatic surprise
on Israel during the interregnum between the U.S. presidential election on Nov.
8 and his departure from office in January.
Some say the surprise will be a speech laying down parameters for
a final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian dispute or some type of formal
censure of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, but the scenario generating
most discussion is a decision to support, or perhaps not to veto a UN Security
Council resolution recognizing a Palestinian state.
This would be a bombshell. Washington’s long-stated policy is that
a Palestinian state should be established only through an agreement negotiated
directly between the two sides. In practice, this would require that
Palestinian leaders agreed to recognize Israel as a Jewish state and concede
the so-called “right of return” for refugees of the 1948 war and their
descendants to areas within Israel’s borders, a prospect which would mean the
demographic destruction of Israel.
For decades, Palestinian leaders have
made it clear they won’t do this: Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas doesn’t mince words, telling
a gathering of Arab foreign ministers in Cairo in November 2014, “We will never
recognize the Jewishness of the state of Israel.” Efforts to win recognition of
Palestinian statehood by foreign governments and multilateral institutions are
designed to skirt this precondition for statehood.
Any state that comes into existence without Palestinian leaders
formally recognizing Israel will be a brutal, unstable train wreck, with areas
under its jurisdiction likely to remain a hotbed of terrorism. On top of
whatever existing factors are producing the endemic corruption and autocracy of
the Abbas regime (not to mention the Hamas regime in Gaza), unilateral
recognition of a Palestinian state will vindicate radicals who have been saying
all along that there’s no need to compromise.
On the other hand, official Palestinian acknowledgement once and
for all that Israel is not just here to stay, but has a right to stay, would
deprive Palestinian leaders of time-honored tools for manipulating their
constituents – appealing to and inflaming their baser anti-Jewish prejudices,
promising them salvation if they’ll only shut up ‘til the Zionists are
defeated, and so forth. Instead, they will have to do things like govern well
and create jobs to win public support.
Previous American administrations have understood that recognizing
Palestinian statehood before Abbas and company allow Palestinian society to
undergo this transformation would be the height of irresponsibility. This is
why American veto power has consistently blocked efforts to unilaterally
establish a Palestinian state by way of the UN Security Council.
Notwithstanding his apparent pro-Palestinian
sympathies and affiliations prior to running for the Senate and
later the White House, President Obama initially maintained this policy. The
expressed threat of an American veto foiled Abbas’ 2011 bid to win UN
member-state status for “Palestine.” He settled for recognition of
non-member-state status by the General Assembly in 2012.
As moves by the PA to bring the issue of statehood to the UN
picked up steam last year, however, it appeared to walk back this commitment.
While U.S officials privately maintained there was “no change,” Obama and U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power refused – despite the urging
of Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid – to state publicly that the U.S. would
use its veto to stop a resolution recognizing Palestinian statehood.
The conventional wisdom was that Obama’s refusal to make such a
public declaration was intended to exert pressure on Netanyahu to tone down his
opposition to the Iran nuclear deal, and later to punish him for it or hold it
out to secure concessions. As his presidency enters its final months, it’s
clear something even more nefarious is at work.President Obama’s failure to clarify his administration’s position has greatly damaged prospects for Israeli-Palestinian peace. Even if it is Obama’s intention to veto any resolution on Palestinian statehood that comes up at the UN, his refusal to publicly state this – or, put differently, his determination to go on the record for the history books not saying it – has fueled perceptions among Palestinians and European governments facing pressures of their own that American will is softening.
It is imperative that Congress use the tools at its disposal to
make this unwise path as difficult as possible for the Obama Administration.
Ultimately, a one-sided UN
declaration such as this serves only to postpone by a long shot the day when
Palestinian leaders accept Israel as it is – the homeland of the Jewish people
– and allow their subjects to enjoy the lasting peace and prosperity they and
their neighbors deserve.
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