US Vice President Mike Pence’s speech in the Knesset on Monday was everything that someone hoping for no change in the status between Israel and the Palestinians could hope for.
In the first visit to Israel by a high-ranking US official since President Donald Trump’s declaration last month that the US recognizes Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, and the resultant uproar it caused around the world, Pence doubled down on the US alliance to Israel’s views – the whole “good versus evil” and “right versus wrong” analogy.
It’s a good thing the Joint List MKs were hustled out of the plenum after their tacky display of disrespect at the beginning of Pence’s speech. Otherwise, they might have charged the podium at Pence’s implication that Palestinians were evil and wrong.
Pence paid lip service to the importance of the resumption of contact between the sides, a call that was applauded by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in his seat. But when the vice president reiterated Trump’s position that the final status of Jerusalem’s and other disputed areas’ borders were open to negotiation if both sides arrived at the end game of a two-state solution, the prime minister sat passively.
Opposition leader Isaac Herzog was the only Israeli speaker – as opposed to Netanyahu and Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein – to talk about the importance of engagement with the Palestinians. Netanyahu and Edelstein only mentioned the Palestinians to slam Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’s deplorable rewrite of history in his speech in Cairo last week.
For the Israeli government, it seems that the pedal to the metal support from Trump, Pence and Nikki Haley has provided a “get out of jail free” card. The US is in our pocket so we don’t have to make any moves toward the Palestinians because we will always be backed up by our friends in Washington.
Instead of giving Israel the confidence and strength to take the initiative and search for ways to move forward, such support can have the opposite effect – do nothing and let the situation fester.
Which raises the question: What does being the most pro-Israel politician to ever serve in such a high US political office, as Pence was described in Sunday’s Jerusalem Post, actually mean? Does being pro-Israel mean accepting Israel’s policies and decisions with no questions asked? Or does it mean using that convergence of values and worldview to create new ideas and paths that will benefit Israel and its neighbors?
Pence is indeed a true friend of Israel. But friends need to help each other out of tight spots, confront each other with challenges and not simply behave as yes men.
The upshot of the Knesset speeches by Pence and Netanyahu was to put all the blame on the Palestinians and none on Israel. The facts may point to that being correct, but the like-minded viewpoints may have a gray lining.
The mutual support system that the Israeli and US administrations have created and are showering on each other certainly creates a warm glow for those who shivered with cold under the Obama administration.
And perhaps Trump’s “Jerusalem is capital of Israel” gambit may indeed pay off by forcing the Palestinians back to negotiations as a junior partner. But real friends are those who help you make hard choices.
And Pence’s speech only reinforced the feeling that Israel doesn’t have to make any choices at all.
5 thoughts on “VP Pence–A true friend to both Israel and Zionism”
“VP Pence–A true friend to both Israel and Zionism” Yeah, but Trump has a plan, doesn’t he? I’m waiting, and the endlessly suffering Palestinians are waiting, for it (but I wager that neither of us is holding breath).
ive been long time in a cave
what does “both israel and zionism” mean
Regardless of what the Trump administration decides to do, the fact remains concealed in maintaining the occupation as is.
In a way, if the situation remains unchanged, it will certainly play into the hands of the Palestinian people. Perhaps more Palestinians will be convinced of accepting a One State Solution and their struggle for citizenship and equality within the state of Israel.
This is solution Israel leaders will not accept and if they do willingly or forcefully, the idea of a Jewish state might be in jeopardy.
We have all witnessed the South Africa example.
My advise to the Israeli government is to accept the Two State solution as presented by the Saudis.
If not, what else can I say?
“VP Pence–A true friend to both Israel and Zionism” Yeah, but Trump has a plan, doesn’t he? I’m waiting, and the endlessly suffering Palestinians are waiting, for it (but I wager that neither of us is holding breath).
ive been long time in a cave
what does “both israel and zionism” mean
as good a theory as any
Mike Pence’s team denies he wrote the controversial New York Times op-ed
actually better.
i wouldn’t want to be a deck hand on any ship named uss liberty nowadays, given the power configuration and dynamics.
#Iwrotetheoped.
Regardless of what the Trump administration decides to do, the fact remains concealed in maintaining the occupation as is.
In a way, if the situation remains unchanged, it will certainly play into the hands of the Palestinian people. Perhaps more Palestinians will be convinced of accepting a One State Solution and their struggle for citizenship and equality within the state of Israel.
This is solution Israel leaders will not accept and if they do willingly or forcefully, the idea of a Jewish state might be in jeopardy.
We have all witnessed the South Africa example.
My advise to the Israeli government is to accept the Two State solution as presented by the Saudis.
If not, what else can I say?