by Prof. Efraim Inbar
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry
declared that Israel's plans to build additional apartment houses in Gilo, a
southern Jerusalem neighborhood beyond the Green Line, are partly responsible
for the current impasse in the peace negotiations between Israel and the
Palestinian Authority.
This indicates profound American
misunderstanding of the situation, because Gilo, with more than 40,000
residents, is to be part of Israel under any agreement. Moreover, the peace
negotiations have little chance of succeeding as long as the Palestinians demand
to partition Jerusalem.
The Palestinians and most of the
international community fail to understand that the past offer by Ehud Barak to
divide Jerusalem at the Camp David summit in 2000, which was repeated by Ehud
Olmert in 2007, was divorced from the strong attachment a majority of Israelis
feel towards the eternal city. This incredible concession has continually lacked
the necessary domestic political support. Strategic considerations also dictate
holding on to a greater Jerusalem.
Israeli public opinion is committed
to maintaining the status quo in Jerusalem. All polls show that over two-thirds
of Israelis feel that Jerusalem should remain the united capital of Israel while
only 20 percent favor its division and becoming the capital of both a Jewish
state and a future Palestinian state. The group showing the most support (almost
80 percent) for Jerusalem remaining the undivided capital is the 18- to
24-year-old age cohort. Of this group, the strongest support was expressed by
ultra-Orthodox and religious Israelis, the fastest-growing segments in the
Jewish population. Asked whether Israel should relinquish its control over the
Temple Mount, the holiest place for Jews, over 70 percent of Israelis
disagree.
After Barak's offer in 2000, more
than 250,000 people demonstrated against his violation of the Jerusalem taboo,
in the largest rally ever held in Israel. The electrifying hold of Jerusalem on
the Jewish psyche is not sufficiently appreciated. Moreover, the Orthodox
injunction against visiting the Temple Mount has eroded, allowing a growing
number of Israelis to have the mystical experience of meeting the metaphysical
past and future. Such feelings are politically potent, foreclosing the
possibility that Israelis will sit idly and watch a transfer of sovereignty in
Jerusalem.
In 2000, the division of Jerusalem
lacked the necessary majority in the Knesset, and Barak's coalition
disintegrated (for other reasons as well). Similarly, in 2008, Olmert
experienced coalition difficulties because he placed Jerusalem on the
negotiators' agenda. No Israeli government is likely to survive concessions in
Jerusalem under the current political constellation, which is unlikely to
change. If elections are held in the near future, the strength of the opposition
to any concessions in Jerusalem will only grow.
Jerusalem's importance to the Jews is
not only historical and religious; the city also holds strategic importance in
controlling the only highway from the coast of the Mediterranean Sea to the
Jordan River Valley, along which military forces can move with little
interference from Arab population concentrations. Jerusalem is the linchpin for
erecting a security zone along the Jordan Rift Valley.
If Israel wants to maintain a
defensible border in the east, it needs to secure the east-west axis from the
coast to the Jordan Valley, via an undivided Jerusalem. Keeping Greater
Jerusalem, which includes the settlement blocs that President George W. Bush
recognized as realities that must be accommodated in a future settlement, is a
strategic imperative. Arguments that ignore the immense potential for political
upheaval east of the Jordan River and the fluctuating nature of military
technology in order to minimize the military importance of Jerusalem and its
central role in the eastern line of defense for Israel are opportunistic.
Designing stable defensible borders in accordance with current, but transient,
technological state-of-the-art and political circumstances is strategically
foolish. The turmoil in the past few years in the Arab world only indicates the
need for great caution.
Finally, the partition of Jerusalem
is simply a bad idea when the prevailing zeitgeist dictates uniting cities such
as Berlin, Belfast or Nicosia. Why should Jerusalem be different? Jews have held
a majority in the city for the past 150 years, while Jerusalem has never been
the capital of any Arab or Muslim political entity.
Moreover, the Arab minority in the
city has shown its preference for living under Israeli rule, as many have moved
to the Israeli side of the security barrier being built around Jerusalem. Polls
show clearly that a large majority of Jerusalem Arabs oppose being subject to
Palestinian rule. Their choice is reasonable, as Jerusalem offers the quality of
life of a modern Western city, while only a few kilometers away, a Third World
standard of living, chaos and religious intolerance are the norm. An undivided
Jerusalem is the best guarantee for a better life for all
Jerusalemites.
In sum, the unreasonable Palestinian
demand for dividing Jerusalem is an obstacle for a better future.
Professor Efraim Inbar, director of the
Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, is a professor of political studies at
Bar-Ilan University and a fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=8023
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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