Mr
Trump holds up a proclamation to officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital
of Israel
|
Donald Trump has
announced that the United States now recognizes Jerusalem as the capital of
Israel, in a move that upends decades of US policy.
(PA Graphics)
|
He
said he has deemed this change to be in America’s interests.
Mr
Trump said the decision “marks the beginning of a new approach to conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians”.
World
leaders have warned that the move could inflame tensions in the volatile Middle
East.
Mr
Trump also said he is directing the State Department to begin preparations to
move the US Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
He
said the move would allow the department to begin hiring architects and making
other plans, adding that it was “a recognition of reality”.
Trump And The Middle
East: A New Course
AFP
reports that Donald Trump has spent much of his first year as president of the
United States seeking to undo the legacy of his predecessor, Barack Obama.
The
volatile Middle East is one of the many areas where Trump has broken with US
policy and precedent.
On
Wednesday, Trump overturned decades of US policy by announcing that Washington
recognizes Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and setting in motion plans to
move the embassy there from Tel Aviv.
Here
is a look at some of the hot button issues in the Middle East and the new
course being steered by Trump:
-
Israel and the Palestinians -
Trump
has instituted a policy of unwavering support for Israel after a period of
strained relations between Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The
last days of the Obama administration included an extraordinary US refusal at
the United Nations to block a Security Council resolution condemning Israeli
settlement construction.
Netanyahu
welcomed Trump's November 2016 election saying he was a "true friend of
the State of Israel."
Since
then, Trump has appointed a US ambassador to Israel, David Friedman, known for
his support for settlement activity, and ordered the withdrawal of US support
for UNESCO, citing anti-Israel bias.
Trump
has tasked his son-in-law Jared Kushner, a senior adviser, with relaunching
moribund peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
But
he has been lukewarm about a Palestinian state and angered Palestinian leaders
earlier this year with a threat -- since withdrawn -- to close the Palestine
Liberation Organization mission in Washington.
-
Iran -
Trump
considers Iran to be the principal threat to US interests in the Middle East
and has frequently condemned the Islamic Republic for what he sees as its
"destabilizing" influence in Yemen, Syria and Lebanon.
Trump
has been a relentless critic of the Iran nuclear deal signed in 2015 and has
repeatedly threatened to scrap the agreement intended to prevent Tehran from
developing nuclear weapons.
The
president's tough stance on Iran has earned praise from Netanyahu and from
Saudi Arabia, the Islamic Republic's chief regional rival.
-
Saudi Arabia, Egypt -
Trump
has strengthened ties with Saudi Arabia and his first official visit abroad as
president was to the oil-rich monarchy, where he was received with pomp and
circumstance.
Trump
threw his support behind the anti-corruption crackdown launched by Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Saudi actions against Qatar, which Riyadh
accuses of cooperating with Tehran.
Relations
with another Middle East powerhouse -- Egypt -- have also entered a new era
under Trump.
Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi was persona non grata under Obama and the United
States cut off some military aid because of the bloody crackdown on supporters
of the former president.
But
Trump welcomed Sisi to the White House in April and proclaimed his "strong
backing" for the Egyptian leader.
-
Syria -
Trump
frequently accused Obama of failing to stand up to Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad and in April he ordered the first US military strike on Syrian troops
since the civil war began in that country.
Dozens
of US missiles were fired at a Syrian air base in retaliation for a chemical
weapons attack on a rebel town which left 87 people dead.
The
United States has deployed some 2,000 troops in Syria and the Pentagon said
Tuesday that they will stay "as long as we need" to prevent a return
of the Islamic State group.
Trump also reinforced the US military contingent in Afghanistan, a move at odds with Obama's efforts to withdraw US troops from conflict zones abroad.
No comments:
Post a Comment