Fresh anger poured in from across the Muslim world Wednesday as President Trump
said the United States recognizes Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, a move
that Arab and European leaders have warned could spark violence and
destroy any hopes of reviving the Mideast peace process.
Israel
responded with satisfaction to the president’s announcement, in which
Trump also said he was setting in motion the process of moving the
American Embassy from Tel Aviv. In a show of appreciation, the Jerusalem
municipality projected the American and Israeli flags onto the walls of
the Old City, home to important Jewish, Muslim and Christian holy
sites.
Yet even as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the president’s declaration as “courageous and just,” Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas slammed the “destruction of all the efforts to achieve peace.”
Ahead
of the announcement, U.S. allies in the Middle East and Europe had
urged Trump to refrain from taking steps they fear could ignite unrest
across the region.
Jerusalem’s
status is one of the most sensitive and inflammatory issues fueling the
Israel-Palestinian conflict. Israel claims the city in entirety as its
capital; Palestinians want the eastern sector to be the seat of
government for a future state.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres, speaking from New York moments after the president finished
his address, said Jerusalem’s status was an issue to be decided through
negotiations.
“In this moment of great anxiety, I want to make it
clear there is no alternative to the two-state solution,” he said,
referring to a broad international consensus supporting side-by-side
Israeli and Palestinian states.
At the Vatican, Pope Francis
prayed that Jerusalem’s status quo would be preserved to avoid adding
new tension to a world “already shaken and scarred by many cruel
conflicts.”
"Jerusalem
is a unique city, sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims who venerate
the holy places of their respective religions, and has a special
vocation to peace," Francis said at his weekly audience.
Leaders
from Britain, France, Germany and Italy joined in the chorus of
opprobrium for Trump’s decision. France’s President Emmanuel Macron
called the U.S. move “regrettable.” British Prime Minister Theresa May
said she intended to speak with Trump and express concerns.
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, meeting in the Turkish capital with Jordan’s King Abdullah
II, said the U.S. president’s stance would provide a boost for
terrorist groups. The leaders plan to convene extraordinary meetings of
the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the Arab League in the
coming days to discuss the region’s response to the U.S. moves.
Ahmed
Aboul Gheit, the Arab League’s secretary-general, said he was surprised
that the U.S. administration would "get involved in an unjustified
provocation of the feelings of 360 million Arabs and 1.5 billion Muslims
to please Israel.”
The status of Israel is one of the few issues
that unites leaders in a part of the world riven by war and sectarian
divides. Archrivals Saudi Arabia and Iran, which are engaged in deadly
proxy conflicts in Yemen and Syria, have offered some of the harshest
commentary about Trump’s plan in recent days.
The Islamic
Republic’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, told a gathering of
Iranian officials Wednesday that "without a doubt, the Islamic world
will resist this conspiracy … and beloved Palestine will finally be
freed," the semiofficial Fars news agency reported.
Yet officials could not pass up the opportunity to take digs at their rivals.
"If
half the funds spent by some rulers in the region to encourage
terrorism, extremism, sectarianism and incitement against neighbors was
spent on liberating Palestine, we wouldn't be facing today this American
egotism," Iran's foreign minister, Javad Zarif, said in a tweet.
Palestinians,
already discouraged over what they describe as a consistently
pro-Israel stance by the United States, said Trump’s decision
essentially killed any remaining peace hopes. Leaders called for three
“days of rage” culminating after Friday prayers.
Although protests
in the West Bank were muted Wednesday, in part because of the cold
weather and rain, hundreds took to the streets in the Gaza Strip,
chanting angry slogans against the U.S. and Israel, and burning the
flags of both countries.
“Trump has just declared the end of the
two-state solution,” said Tahrir Aloumor, 36, who joined a demonstration
in the Jabaliya refugee camp. “Shame on you, Trump.”
As darkness
fell, the walled Old City — focus of many outbreaks of violence — was
largely quiet. A visiting Palestinian American, Jamal Abu Sneineh, 53,
called Trump’s move “shortsighted” and said it would harm the already
moribund peace process.
“It feels surreal to be back in Jerusalem
during this time,” he said. “Look at the stones, and you can feel the
history and the hands that built them.”
International backing for
Trump’s plan was almost nonexistent, but Israeli media reports on
Wednesday cited at least one leader who is on board with the president’s
move: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, who is denounced by human
rights groups and many Western governments for a deadly anti-drug
campaign.Israel’s Channel One reported that Duterte expressed interest
in moving his country’s embassy, as Trump plans to do, from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem.
Special correspondent Samir Zedan reported
from Jerusalem and staff writers Zavis and King from Beirut and
Washington, respectively. Special correspondents Rushdi Abualouf in
Gaza, Omar Medhat in Cairo and Ramin Mostaghim in Tehran contributed to this report.
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