A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, December 17, 2017
Israel's Jerusalem victory looks increasingly hollow -#Opinion
Netanyahu
prepared Israel for a historic event with Trump's recognition of
Jerusalem as its capital. The result was much less triumphant

The timing of President Donald Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as
Israel's capital last week was calculated to have maximum effect on the
Israeli public.
Trump started speaking at 8pm local time (1pm Washington time, a strange
time for an historic speech) when Israel's television networks began
their prime time evening news shows. The text was provided in advance so
that the networks could prepare a translation and subtitles in Hebrew.
Israeli commentators were unanimous in their assessment that Trump's
speech was an historic one. Even the left admitted how thrilled they
were to hear the US president speaking in such glowing terms about the
Jewish attachment to its capital, all 3000 years of it.
Netanyahu learnt this week the grave limitations of the American influence worldwide in the Trump era
Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu went into celebration mode. The son of
a medieval historian, Netanyahu framed Trump's statement as one of the
most important events in modern Jewish history, equal only to the
Balfour Declaration, Israel's independence in 1948 and the occupation
(or liberation, as he put it) of Jerusalem in 1967. Culture Minister
Miri Regev, a woman known for her pomposity, said that Trump's name
"will be engraved forever on the stones of Jerusalem and the Wailing
Wall".
No celebrations
Yet despite the warm welcome given to Trump's speech by the Jewish
Israeli public, no scenes of joy were seen in Israel or even in
Jerusalem itself. Most Israelis, it seemed, were content to know that
the American president had unambiguously sided with them but failed to
see how it affected their life. From the first day of kindergarten,
Israelis are taught that Jerusalem is their capital. With all its
symbolic weight, there was nothing new in Trump's speech.
As days passed it became clearer that even politically, Trump's words
had less impact than the Israeli right read into them. The fact that
Trump declared that borders would be decided in later negotiations was
initially ignored, intentionally or unintentionally, by the Israeli
right, which saw the declaration as a recognition in Israel's annexation
of East Jerusalem.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a speech on 6 December 2017
during a diplomatic conference organised by daily Israeli newspaper
Jerusalem Post focused on Israel's security and economic ties with
countries globally, in Jerusalem (AFP)
Transportation Minister Israel Katz, one of the strongest men in
Netanyahu's Likud party and a frontrunner in the undeclared battle to
replace him if he is forced to resign over the criminal investigations
against him, was brave enough to tell the Saudi website Elaf that Trump
did not recognise a "united Jerusalem" (code for the annexation of its
Palestinian part) as Israel's capital and left the door open to the
issue of East Jerusalem. This admission is a long way off the jubilation
shown by Netanyahu to Trump's speech.
Trump's declaration was likened to the exchange of letters between
President George W. Bush and Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon in 2004
in which the American president wrote that the Palestinian refugee
problem should be resolved outside of Israel's borders and that any
peace deal would have to take into account the existing Israeli
settlements in the West Bank.
But this is misleading. While settlements and the right of return
remained highly contentious in all negotiations between Israelis and
Palestinians, the Palestinians never actually refused to recognise West
Jerusalem as Israel's capital after a peace deal was signed.
No more takers
The international arena looks even less promising for Israel. Netanyahu
did not conceal his hope that other countries would follow Trump's lead.
Given the weight traditionally attached to US positions on world
affairs, this was a reasonable surmise. When the Czech president Milos
Zeman announced that his country would consider recognising West
Jerusalem as Israel's capital, this was seen as just the first drop in a
wave of international recognition.
Even the Czech Republic and Hungary, two of the more pro-Israeli Eastern Europe countries, refrained to say when, if at all, they will move their embassy to Jerusalem
It did not happen. Netanyahu hoped that during his visit to Brussels
early this week, which was scheduled before Trump's speech, he would be
able to convince at least some EU member states to recognise Jerusalem.
He failed. Federica Mogherini, the EU High Representative for Foreign
Affairs, flatly rejected the American move and set her face against any
compromise on the issue. His meeting with the French president, Emmanuel
Macron, did not go any better.
Even the Czech Republic and Hungary, two of the more pro-Israeli Eastern
Europe countries in which Netanyahu invested considerable effort and
time, refrained eventually to say when, if at all, they will move their
embassy to Jerusalem.
Netanyahu learned this week the limitations of America's global reach in
the Trump era. If, as reports in the Israeli media suggest, EU leaders
publicly declare Jerusalem as the joint capital of Israel and a future
independent Palestinian state, it will amount to a colossal Israeli
diplomatic defeat.
From the Israeli point of view, the picture also looks mixed regarding
the Palestinians. It is true that Palestinian parties and organisations,
which unanimously called for large-scale demonstrations last week, have
so far failed to mobilise the masses.
Protests
There were marches and clashes in all the Palestinian cities, but the
scale was smaller than expected. The Israeli army was relatively
restrained, especially in the West Bank, and as the number of casualties
has so far been small, the Israeli media just ignored the
demonstrations.
Most Israeli commentators interpreted this mild initial response as a
failure for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and for Hamas' hope of
launching a third Intifada. But this is to look at things from a
strictly short-term perspective. The demonstrations did not die out and
grew more intense on Friday, and the situation along the border with
Gaza became more violent with several protesters killed.
Arab-Israeli
protesters shout slogans and wave the Palestinian flag during a
demonstration in the Israeli-Palestinian town of Sakhnin on 15 December
against US President Donald Trump's decision to recognise Jerusalem as
the capital of Israel. (AF
Yet more importantly, after being almost forgotten by most of the Arab
and Muslim world, the issue of Jerusalem helped Abbas revive the
Palestinian question on the regional and international arena. The
demonstrations all over the Muslim world sent a clear message that as
far as Jerusalem is concerned, the Palestinians are not alone.
The final resolution of the 57-member-strong Organisation of Islamic
Cooperation summit held in Istanbul this week, which declared East
Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Palestine, did not come as
surprise to Israel. Yet Israel cannot ignore the fact that it holds full
diplomatic relations with at least 20 members of this organisation.
Arab allies muted
No less important, the "Sunni axis" – Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states and
Egypt - in which Netanyahu and Israel held high hopes, seems to have
suffered a painful blow. Although the language they used was mild, Egypt
and Saudi Arabia had no option but to condemn Trump's speech. It is
difficult to see how the Saudi government will permit itself to upgrade
its relations with Israel, as it clearly wished to just before Trump’s
latest move.
Read more ►
With their refusal to accept the visit of the US Vice President Mike
Pence in Ramallah, Abbas and the Palestinians have raised the stakes
against what was considered to be the strongest and maybe only outside
force in the Middle East conflict. So far, it seems, the gamble has
worked. If Trump hoped to push through his "ultimate deal" by persuading
the Saudis to pressure the Palestinians into an agreement which -
according to most leaks - seemed extremely unfavourable to them, this
prospect looks very distant now.
Despite the Palestinian position, the US will remain the main negotiator
in the Middle East for the foreseeable future, primarily because no one
else – neither the EU nor Russia - is ready to take its place. But the
weakness shown by American diplomacy in recent days will certainly not
help its best friend in the region, namely Israel. This is not to say
the solemn American recognition of Jerusalem as its capital made Israel
the loser, but it did not give it any tangible gains either.
- Meron Rapoport is
an Israeli journalist and writer, winner of the Napoli International
Prize for Journalism for an inquiry about the stealing of olive trees
from their Palestinian owners. He is ex-head of the news department at
Haaretz, and now an independent journalist.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
Photo: Demonstrators walk over
images of Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu as they take part in a
protest in Paris on 9 December (AFP)


