Trump must ensure there are consequences for supporting
U.N. Security Council Resolution 2334.
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power abstaining, Dec. 23. |
By JOHN BOLTON
Last Friday, on the eve of Hanukkah and Christmas, Barack
Obama stabbed
Israel in the front. The departing president refused to veto United Nations
Security Council Resolution 2334—a
measure ostensibly about Israeli settlement policy, but clearly intended to tip
the peace process toward the Palestinians. Its adoption wasn’t pretty. But,
sadly, it was predictable.
Mr.
Obama’s refusal to use Washington’s veto was more than a graceless parting
gesture. Its consequences pose major challenges for American interests.
President-elect Donald
Trump should
echo Ambassador Daniel
Patrick Moynihan’s defiant and ringing 1975 response to the U.N.’s “Zionism is
racism” resolution: that America “does not acknowledge, it will not abide by,
it will never acquiesce in this infamous act.”
Mr. Obama
argues that Resolution 2334 continues a bipartisan American policy toward the
Middle East. It does precisely the opposite. The White House has abandoned any
pretense that the actual parties to the conflict must resolve their
differences. Instead, the president has essentially endorsed the Palestinian
politico-legal narrative about territory formerly under League of Nations’
mandate, but not already under Israeli control after the 1948-49 war of
independence.
Resolution
2334 implicitly repeals the iconic Resolution 242, which affirmed, in the wake
of the 1967 Six-Day War, that all affected nations, obviously including Israel,
had a “right to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries free from
threats or acts of force.” It provided further that Israel should withdraw
“from territories occupied in the recent conflict”—but did not require
withdrawal from “the” or “all” territories, thereby countenancing
less-than-total withdrawal. In this way Resolution 242 embodied the “land for
peace” theory central to America’s policy in the Middle East ever since.
By
contrast, Resolution 2334 refuses to “recognize any changes to the [1967]
lines, including those with regard to Jerusalem, other than those agreed by the
parties through negotiations.” This language effectively defines Israel’s
borders, even while superficially affirming direct talks. Chatter about
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations is nothing but a truism, equally applicable to
the U.S. and Canada, or to any nations resolving trivial border disputes.
There can
be no “land for peace”—with Israel retroceding territory in exchange for peace,
as in the 1979 Camp David agreement with Egypt—if the land is not legitimately
Israel’s to give up in the first place. Anti-Israel imagineers have used this
linguistic jujitsu as their central tactic since 1967, trying to create “facts
on the ground” in the U.N.’s corridors rather than by actually negotiating with
Israel. Mr. Obama has given them an indefinite hall pass.
The Trump
administration could veto future Security Council measures that extend
Resolution 2334 (e.g., purportedly recognizing a Palestinian state). Mr. Trump
could also veto efforts to implement Resolution 2334 (e.g., the sanctions for
what it calls Israel’s “blatant violation under international law”). Still,
there are significant dangers. Other U.N. bodies, such as the General Assembly
and the numerous specialized agencies where America has no veto, can carry
Resolution 2334 forward.
Even more
perilous is that individual nations or the European Union can legislate their
own sanctions under Resolution 2334’s provision that “all States” should
“distinguish in their relevant dealings” between Israel’s territory “and the
territories occupied since 1967.” This is a hunting license to ostracize Israel
from the international economic system, exposing it and its citizens to
incalculable personal and financial risk.
Once in office, President Trump should act urgently to mitigate or reverse
Resolution 2334’s consequences. Mr. Obama has made this significantly harder by
rendering America complicit in assaulting Israel. Nonetheless, handled
properly, there is an escape from both the current danger zone and the
wasteland in which the search for Middle East peace has long wandered.
First,
there must be consequences for the adoption of Resolution 2334. The Trump
administration should move to repeal the resolution, giving the 14 countries
that supported it a chance to correct their error. Nations that affirm their
votes should have their relations with Washington adjusted accordingly. In some
cases this might involve vigorous diplomatic protests. But the main
perpetrators in particular should face more tangible consequences.
As for
the United Nations itself, if this mistake is not fixed the U.S. should
withhold at least its assessed contributions to the U.N.—which amount to about
$3 billion annually or 22%-25% of its total regular and peacekeeping budgets.
Meanwhile, Washington should continue funding specialized agencies such as the
World Health Organization and the International Atomic Energy Agency, if only
to dissuade them from entering the Resolution 2334 swamp.
Second,
Mr. Trump should unambiguously reject Mr. Obama’s view that Resolution 2334 is
justified to save the “two-state solution.” That goal, at best, has been on
life-support for years. After Mr. Obama’s provocation, its life expectancy
might now be only until Jan. 20. And good riddance. This dead-end vision, by
conjuring an imaginary state with zero economic viability, has harmed not only
Israel but also the Palestinians, the principal intended beneficiaries.
Far
better to essay a “three-state solution,” returning Gaza to Egypt and giving
those parts of the West Bank that Israel is prepared to cede to Jordan. By
attaching Palestinian lands to real economies (not a make-believe one), average
Palestinians (not their political elite), will have a true chance for a better
future. Other alternatives to the two-state approach should also be considered.
Mr. Obama
loves using the word “pivot” for his ever-changing priorities. It is now up to
Mr. Trump to pivot away from his predecessor’s disastrous policies on Israel.
Taking up the challenge will be difficult, but well worth the effort for
America and its friends world-wide.
Mr. Bolton is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute
and author of “Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United
Nations and Abroad” (Simon & Schuster, 2007).