A few days ago, President Trump asked an important question in
a tweet:
"[W]e pay the Palestinians HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year and get no appreciation or respect. But with the Palestinians no longer willing to talk peace, why should we make any of these massive future payments to them?"
On Friday, Trump answered his question and cut funding to the
Palestinians by freezing a $125 million transfer to the United Nations Relief
and Works Agency (UNRWA).
Asked about the decision, the State Department said
deliberations are ongoing about how to move forward. This presents a tremendous
opportunity, but it will take more bold action by the White House. The
administration must continue to hold the Palestinians accountable for their
rejectionism.
Like Trump's December move on Jerusalem, this represents a bold
step that is long overdue. UNRWA, the UN's Palestinian refugee agency, long has
needed reform, but with Palestinian leadership unwilling to even feign serious commitment to
peace, it's probably time to scrap the agency altogether. It stands in the way
of peace.
Trump must hold the Palestinians – and UNRWA
– accountable for their rejectionism.
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The United States funds UNRWA to the tune of $300 million per year, and it does enjoy
important backing and major funding from some in the Muslim world.
But the agency runs large annual deficits.
The Israeli government has remained publicly supportive of the
agency, resisting attempts to defund UNRWA for fear it
will lead to a humanitarian crisis. But things may be changing as the world
finally realizes this agency is harmful.
Founded in 1949 to carry out direct relief and works programs
for Palestinian refugees from
Israel's War of Independence, UNRWA long ago outlived its charge. When it was established, there were as many as 750,000 refugees. Today, UNRWA considers more than 5 million people to be refugees from that conflict and provides education, health care, social programs, loans and more to people in the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan and Syria.
Israel's War of Independence, UNRWA long ago outlived its charge. When it was established, there were as many as 750,000 refugees. Today, UNRWA considers more than 5 million people to be refugees from that conflict and provides education, health care, social programs, loans and more to people in the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan and Syria.
UNRWA is perpetuating
a conflict the Palestinians lost long ago.
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At the Middle East Forum, we seek to bring the UNRWA definition
of a refugee in alignment with U.S. law that recognizes as refugees only those
displaced and their minor children who have not obtained a new nationality and
are not "home." This is a conceptual change: "Yes to assistance,
no to classification as refugees." The result would leave only about
20,000 legitimate Palestinian refugees.
Helping refugees is a noble charge, but UNRWA isn't actually
helping people. It's perpetuating a conflict the Palestinians lost long ago and
aiding Arab governments who refuse to provide for the basic needs of their
people.
Between 1940 and 1945, World War II created 40 million refugees in Europe. The partition
of India and Pakistan displaced 14 million people in 1947. But how many people
remain displaced because of these conflagrations? Zero.
Why, then, has the number of refugees from Israel's War of
Independence grown nearly sevenfold since 1949?
The answer is that it's been
politically advantageous to the Palestinian leadership and to Israel's Arab
neighbors who work to ensure the conflict continues. With UNRWA's support,
they've become experts at perpetuating the conflict.
A recent study found that UNRWA schools teach
Palestinian children that, "Jews have no rights whatsoever in the region
but only 'greedy ambitions.'" The same study found textbooks in UNRWA
schools glorifying terrorists who killed civilians as heroes.
UNRWA has
evolved from a temporary relief and works program into a broad social welfare
organization.
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There have been many ideas about how to reform UNRWA, including
forcing host governments such as the Palestinian Authority and Lebanon to take
responsibility for their people. But the time for reform has passed. It's time
to dismantle the agency.
Israeli Education Minister Naftali Bennett recently called UNRWA a "terror-supporting
organization" and said that "aiding the residents of Gaza should be
no different than aiding the Syrian residents suffering under a terror regime,
or aiding any other group of descendants of refugees."
Ending UNRWA doesn't mean ending humanitarian support for
Palestinians. If the definition of a Palestinian refugee changes, the small
number of remaining refugees could be served by the U.N. Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and Palestinians in need could be
served by the Palestinian Authority.
To help bring that about, Trump should clarify that the U.S.
Government's definition of a Palestinian refugee includes only those who are
actually refugees. This change would help depoliticize the provision of aid.
Importantly, this would be a step toward taking a major point of contention —
the rights of Palestinians to return to Israel — off the table, just as the
administration did with Jerusalem.
The only path to peace is one that forces
Palestinians to accept that continued rejectionism is a dead end.
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Ultimately, the path to peace is one that forces the Palestinian
people to realize that continued rejection of Israel is a dead end. They must
understand that the only way to build a better future for their children is to
abandon the conflict that has been central to their identity for most of the
last century.
Defunding UNRWA gives Palestinian leadership a stark choice: get
serious about forging lasting peace with a Jewish state in Israel, or refuse to
play ball and be forced to act like a responsible government that cares for its
own people.
President Trump came into office making big promises about
solving the Arab-Israeli conflict and reforming the United Nations.
His
announcement on Jerusalem dealt a serious blow to the Palestinian rejectionism
that has prolonged this conflict for generations.
Finding a way to end UNRWA's
support for the structures behind the unwillingness of Palestinians to make
peace would be another important step. Freezing payments is a step in the right
direction.
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