It is disgraceful that the United
States, Israel’s best ally and friend, has never recognized Jerusalem as
Israel’s capital even though it recognizes the claimed capitals of numerous
brutal dictatorships and enemy nations.
It is also shameful that the
Europeans still call the eastern part of Jerusalem a “settlement” and part of
the “ occupied territories” when that part of the city was the location of the
capital city of ancient Israeli kingdoms for over 1000 years and was
home to Judaism’s two Holy Temples.
But the ultimate shame for the
distorted world view of Jerusalem is on successive Israeli
governments, starting with Rabin and Peres, who agreed to put Jerusalem on the
negotiation table as a final status issue of the Oslo Agreement, thus, giving
legitimacy to the Arabs’ revisionist history of lies and myths that Jerusalem
was ever the capital of an Arab state.
Of course, Jews’ rights were
jeopardized again when the governments led by Barak in 2000 and Olmert in 2008
were willing to give specific offers to Arafat and Abbas respectively to
re-divide the city and waive most rights to the Temple Mount, the holiest
site of the Jews. Thankfully both offers were rejected by our enemies.
The slippery slope of giving away
our rights in Jerusalem began immediately after the Six Day War in 1967, in
which Israel in a war of self-defense routed the Jordanian Army and captured
eastern Jerusalem. Then Israeli Minister of Defense, Moshe Dayan apologetically
sacrificed Israeli’s sovereign and religious rights by handing total
administrative control over the Temple Mount to Jordan’s Islamic Waqf. The
same Jordanians who during their previous 19 year control of eastern
Jerusalem, destroyed many Jewish synagogues and denied Jews access to their
holiest sites, including the Western Wall and Temple Mount.
Prime Minister Netanyahu should
share part of the blame, even though he also should be credited for working
tirelessly for four years to slow down Obama’s obsessive pursuit of
establishing a Palestinian state and dividing Jerusalem.
In 2010, Netanyahu repeatedly
apologized when President Obama was personally involved in
orchestrating a harsh public confrontation with Israel over its announcing of
plans to build new housing units in north Jerusalem during a visit by Vice
President Biden. Moreover, in June, data released by the Central Bureau of
Statistics showed that not a single new project was started or planned in the
Jewish neighborhoods in eastern Jerusalem since the start of 2013. Jerusalem’s
deputy mayor confirmed that it was on a direct order of the prime minster.
So now we reap the sour fruits of
our own ambivalent past actions and decisions about our beloved capital.
The European Union on July 17 issued
a new directive that its bodies and member nations will no longer be a party to
any economic, social or academic cooperation and agreements with Israeli
institutions operating beyond the pre- 1967 borders, which includes Judea,
Samaria and east Jerusalem. Thus the EU is in effect demanding that Israel deny
any rights to the Western Wall or the Jewish Quarter of the Old City and erect
a border in the middle of Jerusalem, which has been the Jewish capital much
longer than any city has been the capital of any European nation.
On July 23rd, a US federal appellate
court found unconstitutional a 2002 law that gives thousands of Americans born
in Jerusalem the option of listing Israel as their birth place on US passports.
The judge stated in the decision that Congress intended to force the State
Department to deviate from its decades-long position of neutrality on what
nation or government, if any, has sovereignty over Jerusalem. The court said
that it found the State Department‘s position compelling that a reversal of US
policy could provoke uproar throughout the Arab and Muslim world and severely
damage relations.
Now, Netanyahu seems to have given
in to Obama at the worse time, when the Middle East is more unstable and
dangerous than ever. US Secretary of State John Kerry announced that Netanyahu
and Abbas have reached an agreement that provides the basis for the final
status negotiations which includes discussing the status of Jerusalem.
As Abbas demanded as a precondition
to reviving talks that Israel release prisoners with Jewish blood on their
hands and that Israel agree to start negotiations on the basis of the 1967
borders, Israel should have demanded that Jerusalem will never be physically
divided again and the Temple Mount will always stay under Israel sovereignty.
Putting Jerusalem on the negotiating table without setting red lines first will
guarantee its division.
Since the US administration was so
desperate to restart the negotiations in order to claim some foreign policy
success after its dismal record in Egypt, Syria, and Iran, Israel must create
its own uproar and demand that the US move its embassy from Tel Aviv to western
Jerusalem, which both the US and the Europeans claim they do not consider part
of the “pre-1967 occupied territories.”
Historically, Jerusalem has only
been the capital of a Jewish state. For thousands of years Jews swore not to
forget her. What will you say to future generations when they ask you what did
you do when they were negotiating to divide Jerusalem?
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