by Nadav Shragai
Over the past several years, Jordan has repeatedly besmirched Israel with falsehoods and libelous allegations, resulting in a growing number of anti-Israeli U.N. resolutions.
Is
Israel treating Jordan with kid gloves? Does Israel cut the Hashemite
Kingdom too much slack even though Amman is now spearheading anti-Israel
efforts on the world stage, alongside the Palestinians?
Jordan's Minister of
State for Media Affairs Mohammad Al Momani recently boasted that the
kingdom was the driving force behind UNESCO's decision to declare
Hebron's old city an endangered Palestinian world heritage site. Over
the past several years, Jordan has repeatedly besmirched Israel with
falsehoods and libelous allegations, resulting in a growing number of
anti-Israeli U.N. resolutions.
Jordanian diplomats'
main focus is Jerusalem, and particularly the Temple Mount: Jordanian
media regularly reports ludicrous claims about Israel's alleged actions
at the site, including the libelous assertion that Israeli encroachment
is threatening the Al-Aqsa mosque. Even the preposterous claim that
Israel is allowing settlers to "conquer" the site and alter the status
quo has become prevalent in the Jordanian media.
And yet, Israel has let
the Jordanian behavior slide. After all, there are economic, security
and economic considerations at stake that Israel does not want to
jeopardize. But above all, the "handle-with-care" approach is meant to
ensure the monarchy's stability. The unofficial explanation for this
posture is that Israel needs Jordan. But while this may be true, Jordan
needs Israel as well. In the grand scheme of things, both countries need
the other. For obvious reasons, I cannot go into details on the exact
nature of the ties.
To ensure that this
special relationship thrives, Israel has been willing to make
concessions on the Temple Mount. Over the last several years, Jordan has
become a de-facto administrator of the site. In 2014, Jordan and Israel
struck an agreement on how the site was to be governed. This agreement,
made possible through U.S. mediation, all but made Jordan's presence on
the mount official. Jordan also has a written agreement with the
Palestinian Authority that makes the kingdom the representative of the
Palestinian interests in the city until a Palestinian state is
established, with Jerusalem as its capital. But Jordan's agreements with
Israel and the Palestinians are often incompatible with one another,
and this is clear on the world stage, where Jordan is determined to
prove its anti-Israeli chops as a means of obtaining a Palestinian stamp
of approval.
Perhaps this is good
time to remind the Jordanians of the dubious "tolerance" they exhibited
during their 19-year occupation of Judea and Samaria between 1948 and
1967. For example, they chose to blatantly violate their written pledge
to allow Jews to visit holy sites beyond the border, including the
Western Wall and Rachel's Tomb. Under their watch, tens of thousands of
Jewish graves on Jerusalem's Mount of Olives were vandalized or
demolished to make room for rudimentary toilets, trails and stairs.
Dozens of synagogues and yeshivot were destroyed as well during that
period, to ensure that the city's Jewish heritage was erased. Jordan
also destroyed the cemetery in Hebron, where the victims of the 1929
Jewish massacre were buried, and used it to grow vegetables, with bones
occasionally appearing among the crops. The famous Avraham Avinu
Synagogue in Hebron was turned into a public bathroom and a goat pen.
Meanwhile, Jordanians took over the yeshivot and synagogues in the two
Jewish quarters -- in Hebron and in Jerusalem -- and turned them into
homes.
There is nothing wrong with reminding people of Jordan's actions, and Israel should not be reluctant to employ this tactic. Israel also has every right to arrest the administrators on the Temple Mount whenever they incite to violence. The Israel Police has justifiably done so and the officers should have our support.
There is nothing wrong with reminding people of Jordan's actions, and Israel should not be reluctant to employ this tactic. Israel also has every right to arrest the administrators on the Temple Mount whenever they incite to violence. The Israel Police has justifiably done so and the officers should have our support.
A red line must be
drawn when it comes to the Jordanian-led efforts on the Temple Mount, to
make it clear that the site is under Israeli sovereignty and must be
subject to Israeli laws. Israel should also drive home the message that
under Israeli control, the Muslims and Christians in the city can
worship freely and that the religious freedom they enjoy is a world
apart from what the Jordanians allowed.
Nadav Shragai
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=19419
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