Who’s afraid of Donald Trump in the Middle East?

DEBKA

Not much can be ascertained about President-elect Donald Trump’s administration future policies for the Middle East – any more than for most other parts of the world, except that his starting points are likely to be diametrically opposed to those of Barack Obama.

It is all still in the making. The Russian policy he decides to pursue after he enters the White House and his administration is in place is as unfathomable as are the motives that led him to appoint his lawyer and close adviser, the pro-settlement David Friedman, as US ambassador to Israel.

The Democratic Party, in pain from Hillary Clinton’s defeat by Trump, is presenting him as a slavish fan of Putin and has sold this perception to much of the mainstream media.

However, it defies belief that the new president will succumb to Putin’s wiles and allow America’s global stance to be shaped in Moscow. Trump will far more likely present the Kremlin with a clear proposition for measuring Putin’s willingness to follow the Trump line. In as far as he does, the Russian leader will enjoy cooperation in Washington.

The president-elect’s approach to Israel may be equally clear-cut. In this case, the Israeli and US media joined in a front-page chorus denigrating the Friedman appointment as signaling that Donald Trump was ready to ignite a Middle East conflagration by moving the US embassy forthwith to Jerusalem, abandoning the two-station solution of the Israel-Palestinian dispute adopted by his two predecessors, and promoting Israel’s instant annexation of the settlement blocs in Judea and Samaria.

None of this can be inferred from the president elect’s statement Thursday, Dec. 15:

“Friedman has been a longtime friend and trusted adviser to me. His strong relationships in Israel will form the foundation of his diplomatic mission and be a tremendous asset to our country as we strengthen the ties with our allies and strive for peace in the Middle East.”

The ties Netanyahu has quietly built with moderate Sunni powers in the Gulf region, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan, may play out as pertinent to Trump’s wish to strengthen ties with “our allies” (plural) and “strive for peace in the Middle East.”

He clearly does not share the view that the Friedman appointment is an obstacle to either goal, even if he does operate from a US embassy relocated to Jerusalem.

The media presentation of the designated US ambassador as the guiding force of Trump’s policy on Israel and the Palestinians, who takes dictation from Bet El in Judea – which Friedman succored for many years – may be just as wide of the mark as presenting the designated Secretary of State Rex Tillerson as Putin’s pawn in Washington.
That Israel will finally have a friend at the US embassy for the first time in 16 years, instead of adversarial figures, some of whom represented the far-left circles in the United States, can only strengthen the ties which soured seriously under the Obama administration.

However, although the Jewish Home party leader, Education Minister Naftali Bennett, was the first Israeli politician to be received after the election in Trump Tower does not mean that the president elect has automatically bought that party line.

More significantly, Israel’s top security chiefs were sent to New York last week by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to brief US President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team on where the Israeli government stands on current Middle East affairs, including Iran’s nuclear program, the crisis in Syria, terror threats and the Palestinian issue.

It was led by the Mossad Director Yossi Cohen and National Security Council adviser Yaakov Nagel. Israel’s ambassador Ron Dermer joined the meeting.

Their main purpose was to lay the foundations for liaising on security and intelligence matters relating to the Middle East with the newcomers in their field.

For the most part, they answered questions, which were undoubtedly friendly. But policies are not governed by sentiments, however well-intentioned. The group of Israeli security chiefs came away from Trump Tower hardly wiser than when they went in. The impression they gained was that decisions were still in the making and had not yet gelled into policies.

According to DEBKAfile’s sources in New York and Washington, Trump is genuinely keen on pursuing peace between Arab nations and Israel as a framework for resolving the Israel-Palestinian dispute – though not as his immediate priority. If in consequence, Egypt and Jordan establish embassies in Jerusalem, moving the US embassy to the Israeli capital would not present a difficulty.

As for the Palestinians, after refusing to play ball with Barack Obama and John Kerry’s efforts to bring them to the negotiating table and rejecting every Arab plan put before them, they can’t expect a better deal than they were offered hitherto.

Netanyahu still holds to the two-state solution – against the opposition of members of his government and party. Ambassador designate Friedman has written extensively against this plan. But, as Donald Trump’s chief of staff Reince Priebus stressed in a Fox interview Sunday on this very question, policy is made in the Oval Office and diplomats have the job of execution.

But meanwhile, more thinking appears to be going forward. Some of the thinking today turns on the resurrection of the old Jordanian-Palestinian confederation plan that would grant Palestinian independence or autonomy, or maybe an updated version of the Alon plan for secure Israeli borders, which left major Palestinian towns under self-rule (as they are at present) while drawing Israel’s eastern border along the Jordanian River Valley.

There is also talk of Trump naming his son-in-law Jared Kushner as his special Middle East peace envoy. That too is not clear.

The only element of future Trump Middle East policy that appears to be solidifying, according to our sources, is his determination to drastically clip Iran’s wings in the region and stand the Obama policy in this respect on its head. While never admitting as much, Obama preferred Iraq, Iran, Syria and the Shiite Muslim camp to the Sunni side. His successor will likely turn the wheel round in the opposite direction and restore the Sunnis their former pre-eminence in the region.

Trump’s strategic advisers believe that if Moscow can be persuaded to go along with this policy, the Palestinians will find they have no option but to drop their perennial rejectionism and come round to what could be their last chance for an accommodation.

December 19, 2016 | 8 Comments »

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8 Comments / 8 Comments

  1. Ted Belman Said:

    Trump won’t be that passive. He will push for what he thinks others should do and offer to back them if they do it. But Trump will do the leading and they will do the execution.

    I think you are right where there are American interests as he sees them. did you get this take from the transition team member? If true, wrt Israel then Israel will have an unprecedented opportunity to change the paradigm on Jewish settlement in YS AND on annexation. Also, it has an opportunity to kill BDS in the USA and to use US andti BDS laws to whip the euros into line. but first it is the PM of Israel who must change the paradigm on settlements and then Trump can pick it up. The problem with Israel is that they are used to doing things clandestinely under the table but the threat that needs to be ended, which has grown, is the intellectual perception that somehow Jewish settlement in the Jewish homeland is immoral and illegitimate. In this endeavor it is the euros who must be quashed and the best for that is muslim immigration terror to europe bringing in Israel friendly right wing govs with Trumps blessing and encouragement…… but diaspora Jews will likely obstruct this and cause a continuation of the anti semitism which sees jews as complicit in the muslim immigration floods. In that case it will get worse for Jews and Israel. Jews need to be turned away from supporting muslims.

  2. Ted Belman Said:

    The Arab allies will have to form an army that will destroy Isis in Libya, Sinai, Syria and Iraq.

    but how will this work when he finds out that it is the arab allies that are supporting the jihadis…. and that the US did the same? It might be that he makes a deal with russia on syria in exchange for their lowering support for Iran adventurism. Russia knows that all the jihadis act for the same puppet masters. Also, Turkey is becoming a greater threat to everyone. The CIA proxy Hafter in libya appears to be ascendant. I think Trump will seek deals with russia not war. In Iraq perhaps he will support kurdish aspirations and let the sunnis and shias fight it out. I think he will be hostile to hezbullah in lebanon and will give Israel a free hand there. Will trump support a safe haven next to Israel golan border and will Israel support that or will they make a deal to get the UN back in and get the “rebels” to leave?

  3. Ted Belman Said:

    After consulting with his allies, Trump will develop an agenda to suits American interests. The allies will be expected to do the heavy lifting if they want Trump’s support. The Arab allies will have to form an army that will destroy Isis in Libya, Sinai, Syria and Iraq. Trump will back this and orchestrate this but will not put US troops on the ground.

    you misread my take….I do not disagree with your assessment here…. but he is not telling them what to do, he is basically telling them to do it themselves and then he will help if it coincides with US interests, or are you saying she said otherwise? I think the team member here is referring to the kind of BS pontificating such as that always done to Israel.

  4. Who are these “Palestinians” who could be expected to make an accomodation? As structured, the PA and Hamas, the only sovereigns in place, are built exclusively to implement the Phased Plan. Moreover, that is what the street wants. I seriously doubt any accomodation could be made with the existing leadership. They would have to invade and dismantle it, replacing it with traditional clan leadership or Israeli military occupation. Egyptian or Jordanian occupation would just re-create an old situation. These are not allies in the long run or even consistently in the short. And they can be overthrown in a heartbeat by the numerous Islamist forces in those countries. The only real solution is for Israel to annex and nationalize all of the land, place the Arabs under occupation, giving some limited authority to the traditional clan heads, and encourage them all to leave which they are gradually doing anyway to the extent that they can. Islam is a perfect example of the politics of envy. They don’t want Israel. They just don’t want us to have it. According to the Pew survey, as I recall, the pals are the most anti-semitic population in the world, like 93% or something. Neighbors? Shudder. To really be safe, Israel will need to retake Sinai and Southern Lebanon at some point, but also annexing, nationalizing and de-arabizing them.

  5. @ bernard ross:
    I attended the conference at which she spoke. Without regard to what I heard at the conference, I think your take is not correct.

    After consulting with his allies, Trump will develop an agenda to suits American interests. The allies will be expected to do the heavy lifting if they want Trump’s support. The Arab allies will have to form an army that will destroy Isis in Libya, Sinai, Syria and Iraq. Trump will back this and orchestrate this but will not put US troops on the ground.

  6. Trump transition member, Heritage Foundation member and Ronald Reagan Distinguished Fellow Becky Norton Dunlop told Arutz Sheva at the 2nd Jerusalem Leader’s Summit that signs were already evident that Trump would take a different approach to Israel than his predecessors.

    Norton Dunlop said that America wishes to have a working relationship with other world leaders and not to dictate to them what to do.
    http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/221966

    With that simple common sensical approach Trump can re set negative relationships….Most nations want an approach like this..