Mike Pence: US embassy to open in Jerusalem in 2019
Mike Pence: US embassy to open in
Jerusalem in 2019
Al Jazeera 22/01/18
The American embassy will be
moved from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem by the end of next year, US Vice
President Mike Pence told Israeli parliamentarians to enthusiastic applause.
Greeted by a standing ovation
on Monday inside the Knesset, Pence's speech was in its introductory phase when
a scuffle broke out as Palestinian lawmakers from the Joint Arab List alliance
raised posters of the al-Aqsa
Mosque compound in protest before they were forcibly removed by
security.
"America stands with
Israel," Pence said, undeterred by the disruption. "We stand with
Israel because your cause is our cause. Your values are our values, and your
fight is our fight.
"We stand with Israel
because we believe in right over wrong, and good over evil, and in liberty over
tyranny," Pence said to loud applause.
In an unprecedented move, the
US embassy invited leaders of settler movements in the occupied West Bank to
attend Pence's speech in the Knesset - the first ever by a US vice president.
US Ambassador to Israel David
Friedman is a staunch supporter of illegal Israeli settlements
and in the past headed an organisation that donated millions of dollars to one
in the West Bank.
'Gift to extremists'
Al Jazeera's correspondent Harry Fawcett said Pence's
address was directed at two groups: Israelis and his Christian conservative
base at home.
"It was a speech full of religiosity, talking about
the Hebrew bible and its significance here in Israel," Fawcett said,
speaking from inside the Knesset in West Jerusalem.
Chief negotiator for the
Palestinian Authority Saeb Erekat derided Pence's speech for its
controversial religious nature.
"The messianic discourse of Pence is a gift to
extremists and has proven that the US administration is part of the problem
rather than the solution," Erekat said, according to a tweet by the
Palestinian Liberation Organization's negotiations affairs
department.
By Ramzy Baroud
"His message to the rest of the world is clear:
violate international law and resolutions and the US will reward you,"
Erekat added.
Marwan Bishara, Al Jazeera's senior political analyst,
highlighted the "scary" tone of Pence's address, noting the
American vice president's Christian Evangelical background.
"This is a Catholic turned Evangelical. It's like
almost a Wahhabite turned Ayatollah politician that is really bent on a
religious war in the Middle East," Bishara said.
He also noted Pence spoke in terms of defending the
Christians of the Middle East, while Christians in the region have refused to
meet him.
"It's quite frustrating to analyse a person who
speaks in terms of wanting peace while at the same time demolishing the
entire basis for peace," said Bishara. "An entire sermon goes on
without mentioning once that the Palestinians have been forced either into
refugees or under occupation for the last 50 to 70 years."
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, meanwhile,
met with European Union leaders in Brussels on Monday and urged them to
quickly recognise Palestine officially as a nation state.
"We truly consider the European Union as a true
partner and friend and, therefore, we call its member states to swiftly
recognise the state of Palestine and we confirm that there is no
contradiction between recognition and the resumption of negotiations,"
Abbas, 82, told reporters.
Pence visit to Egypt, Jordan
Pence's visit to the Middle East marks the first by a
senior US official after US President Donald Trump recognised Jerusalem as
the capital of Israel last month, exacerbating tensions with Palestinians who
have protested against the declaration.
The vice president spent a whirlwind 36 hours in Egypt and
Jordan, capping a visit that was marked by tense discussions with the two
leaders who are opposed to the US decision.
King Abdullah of Jordan urged Pence to stick to the
two-state solution, which would see East Jerusalem as the capital of a future
Palestinian state.
Pence earlier told Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi if the Israelis and Palestinians "accept
it" then the US would adopt that solution.
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My response:
Bias in this article shows two extremes. The article itself
discusses the bias of the American vice president as he talks about the
conflict between Israel and Palestine as a fight between “good and evil.” Al
Jazeera, coming from the Middle East, completely slams this perspective.
Voicing one of the Palestinian leaders who says that this is why the United
States is a part of the problem, not the solution. Al Jazeera clearly condemns
this move. I agree. Stating as a fact that Jerusalem is Israel’s capital and
recognizing it as such amidst outcry that it is not, only makes worse a
volatile solution. It’s like skipping steps in a difficult and intricate
process. Having lived in Jordan for several years, I respect the King of Jordan, and would agree with him and urge Pence to not rush into a situation he may not know enough about. It doesn’t seem that the United States government in this move really
has peace in mind. I found it interesting in this American vice president’s
claim to be a Christian, though I don’t claim to know his heart, that Christian
leaders in the area are refusing to meet with him. It at least provides a basis
that what this vice president is doing is not a unanimous decision that it
is the “Christian” thing to do. For those who would argue that the Israel
Palestine conflict is only over land, a conflict that has arisen in the past 100
years, I would differ. The vice president appealed to the Jews’ Messianic hope,
while the Palestinians, many of whom who are suffering, away from what they
believe is also their “rightful” land disagree. The issue is so much deeper
than soil but goes to the hearts of the people and when the American vice
president made these statements they are not hopeful for a cooperation between to sides and not for a peaceful
solution that works for all.
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