A How-To Guide to Moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem
By Einat Wilf
TWI Fikra Forum
January 30, 2017
To the President of the United
States, attached please find a short four-step how-to guide for moving the
American embassy in Israel from its present location in Tel Aviv, Israel's
cultural and economic capital, to Jerusalem, Israel's political capital. This
guide will enable you, the President, to realize a clear campaign promise,
support an ally, stand by those truly committed to justice and peace, end a
longstanding but entirely nonsensical U.S. policy, and, as a cherry on top,
expose hypocrisy.
Step 1:
Choose a location for the embassy in Jerusalem that is clearly west of the 1949
armistice line, also known as the 1967 line. This part of Jerusalem has been
under undisputed Israeli sovereignty since there was a modern state of Israel.
This part has nothing holy in it -- it is humdrum neighborhoods (I know, I grew
up there). Make a special effort to find a location that overlooks the most
important sites in this part of the city, all conveniently located next to each
other: the Israeli Knesset, the Supreme Court, the government offices, the
Hebrew University, and the new National Library. You will note that these are
proud symbols of the achievement of Israel and Zionism, symbols of Israeli
sovereignty, knowledge, and creativity. You could do no better than place the
symbol of the friendship between our two countries in their proximity.
Don't be tempted to place the embassy in the area that was the no-man's land
before 1967, where some claim land has already been purchased for that purpose,
and certainly nowhere east of the 1967 lines. This might not completely satisfy
Jewish maximalists, but it is critical for the success of this move and for the
ability to reach the above goals, especially the hypocrisy exposure one.
Step 2:
Make it clear in your statements that the move merely acknowledges what has been
known for decades -- the parts of Jerusalem west of the 1967 line undisputedly
belong to Israel, and Israel has the sovereign right of every nation to place
its capital in its undisputed territory. Add that this move will finally put to
bed the fiction that the vast area that encompasses Jerusalem west and east of
the 1967 line is a "Corpus Separatum" -- a separate entity -- that
belongs to the international community, as envisioned in the UN 1947 partition
proposal. This fiction, as all good fictions do, never existed anywhere but on
paper. It never existed for the simple reason that the Arabs rejected the
partition proposal and opened war to prevent it from being realized, and in
losing the war Jerusalem west of the armistice lines became undisputedly
Israel's, and Jerusalem east of the line entered an extended period of disputed
claims.
Clarify that nearly seventy years after the end of that war, the United States
is finally ending an illogical policy that holds the undisputed status of
Jerusalem west of the 1949 armistice line hostage to the ongoing dispute over
Jerusalem east of that line. The United States is done denying Israel a basic
national sovereign right to establish its capital in undisputed territory. You
can add a statement that the United States continues to call upon Israelis and
Palestinians to directly negotiate the future of Jerusalem east of the 1967
line, with a special call that any arrangement should be mindful of the
importance of the holy places, found only in Jerusalem east of the 1967 lines,
to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam and secure freedom of access and worship to
these sites.
This should minimize the threat of violence in response to the move, since such
statements would give Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims who are not opposed to
Israel within the 1967 lines a face-saving hook that would allow them to treat
the U.S. move as changing nothing, and therefore not deserving of a negative
response.
Step 3:
Call out those Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims who are threatening violence
over the U.S. move for their real meaning: are they denying that Jerusalem west
of the 1967 line clearly belongs to Israel? Are they laying claim to that
territory too? After decades of asking the world to limit Jewish and Israeli
claims east of the 1967 line, are they demanding Israel west of that line for
themselves as well? If Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims oppose the U.S. move, as
outlined above, they are essentially saying that Israel even within the 1967
lines is illegitimate, and thereby expose their enduring maximalist claims.
As a longstanding supporter of the Palestinian right to self-determination, I
have found that it is critical that Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim maximalists
should be called out for what underlies their fury: nothing less than racism
plain and simple, a continued denial that the Jewish people, no more and no less
than any other people, possess the equal and universal right for
self-determination in their land. While those Palestinians, Arabs, and Muslims
might react with violence, it is a violence that is based not on opposition to
the move itself, but on a more base opposition to the very existence of the
state of Israel. This is an important opportunity to clarify that America will
not bow to that, and neither should any other country.
Step 4:
Call upon all other countries that have diplomatic relations with Israel to
follow suit. Address your call especially to those countries that voted for UN
Security Council Resolution 2334, that so thoroughly denied Jewish and Israeli
claims east of the 1967 line, as well as to those countries who participated in
the Paris Conference, which affirmed the resolution. Their resolution, even if
unintended, powerfully affirmed that there is absolutely no legal dispute or
claim to Israeli territory west of the 1967 lines, including in Jerusalem. This
legitimate interpretation of the language of the resolution provides sufficient
legal basis for moving the embassy to Jerusalem west of the 1967 lines. Make it
clear that the United States will view as utter hypocrisy any country denying
Jewish and Israeli claims east of that line while refusing to take the most
obvious step to acknowledge the undisputed nature of Israeli territory west of
that line.
There you have it Mr. President, a clear and simple path to achieving a
multitude of goals: swiftly realizing a major campaign promise, demonstrating
your friendship to a longstanding ally, shaking stale Beltway orthodoxies,
standing up to maximalists and hypocrites alike, and actually taking a real step
toward justice and peace for Israelis and Palestinians. Good luck.