Israel braced for clashes following Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as capital
US missions across the Middle East are braced for a
second day of violent protests over Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s
capital after widespread clashes between Palestinians and Israeli forces on
Thursday.
American diplomatic staff and families are
operating under tight security restrictions ordered by the state department as
fears mounted that spreading protests could target US interests in the region
after Friday prayers.
Israel deployed extra security forces in
anticipation of more clashes in Jerusalem and West Bank cities.
The increased security measures came as Hezbollah’s
secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah, echoed calls made by Hamas earlier in the
day for support for a new Palestinian intifada.
The most violent confrontations on Thursday
occurred in Ramallah, Bethlehem and Hebron, where Israeli forces fired teargas
and plastic-coated rounds as hundreds of protesters threw stones and set alight
barricades.
In the Gaza Strip, dozens of protesters gathered
near the border fence with Israel and clashed with Israeli troops. Two missiles
reportedly launched against Israel later in the day both detonated within the
coastal enclave.
Protests took place across the region: in Jordan,
demonstrators near the US embassy in Amman torched the US flag and pictures of
Trump. In Tunisia, thousands of people joined peaceful protests in Tunis and
several other cities, and labour unions called for even bigger demonstrations
after Friday prayers.
The UN security council called a meeting for Friday
to discuss Trump’s decision, condemnation of which continues to mount across
the Middle East and internationally.
Eight countries on the 15-member council requested
the meeting, including the UK, Italy and France, amid claims from Palestine and
Turkey that the recognition was in breach of international law and UN
resolutions.
The EU foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini,
said the bloc had a united position that Jerusalem must be the capital of both
Israel and a future Palestinian state. France said it rejected the “unilateral”
US decision, while the UK prime minister, Theresa May, and the foreign
secretary, Boris Johnson, both described Trump’s announcement as “unhelpful”.
The Russian foreign ministry said US recognition
risked “dangerous and uncontrollable consequences”.
The Palestinian Authority announced that the US
vice-president, Mike Pence, would “not be welcome in Palestinian Territories”
when he travels to the region later this month.
Pence had been scheduled to meet the Palestinian
president, Mahmoud Abbas, during the trip, but Jibril Rajoub, a senior Fatah
figure, said that the meeting would not take place.
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, hailed
the US move as “historic” and claimed other countries were in contact about
following Trump’s lead. But he was alone among regional leaders in praising the
decision.
Saudi Arabia’s royal court called it “unjustified
and irresponsible”, in a rare rebuke of the US, and Turkey’s president, Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan, said Trump had thrown the Middle East into a “ring of fire”.
Thursday’s
confrontations on the West Bank took place during a widely observed general
strike that closed Palestinian shops and schools. The presence of Palestinian
police in plain clothes and armed security forces in uniform nearby suggested a
degree of control by the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas.
At one
large confrontation in Ramallah, a group of three teenage girls, their faces
masked with headscarves, told reporters: “Trump can go to hell.”
In
Jerusalem’s Old City, where most Palestinian shops were shut, Salah Zuhikeh,
55, told Agence France-Presse: “By this decision, America became a very small
country, like any small country in the world, like Micronesia. America was a
great country for us and everyone.”
Trump
defied overwhelming global opposition by recognising Jerusalem as the capital of Israel on Wednesday and directing the
state department to start making arrangements to move the US embassy from Tel
Aviv.
“While
previous presidents have made this a major campaign promise, they failed to
deliver. Today, I am delivering,” he said in a short speech at the White House.
“My announcement today marks the beginning of a new approach to the conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians.”
It later emerged, in a memo leaked to Reuters news
agency, that the US had privately asked Israel to temper its response to the
announcement.
The state department document, dated 6 December,
stated in talking points for diplomats at the US embassy in Tel Aviv to convey
to Israeli officials: “While I recognise that you will publicly welcome this
news, I ask that you restrain your official response.”
It continued: “We expect there to be resistance to
this news in the Middle East and around the world. We are still judging the
impact this decision will have on US facilities and personnel overseas.
“You know that this is a unique administration. It
makes bold moves. But it is bold moves that are going to be needed if peace
efforts are finally going to be successful.”
Abbas, the
Palestinian president, was due to travel to Jordan on Thursday for talks with
King Abdullah II, who has come out strongly against the move.
The United
Arab Emirates and Iraq also condemned the decision. In Iraq, a prominent
militia backed by Iran, Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, said Trump’s decision
could be a “legitimate reason” to attack US forces in the country.
Jerusalem
is home to sites holy to the Muslim, Jewish and Christian faiths. Israel deems
Jerusalem its eternal and indivisible capital dating to antiquity, and the
city’s status is one of the thorniest barriers to a lasting Israeli-Palestinian
peace.
Its
eastern side was captured by Israel in a 1967 war and annexed in a move not
recognised internationally. Palestinians claim East Jerusalem for the capital
of a future independent state.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/07/jerusalem-un-security-council-us-recognition-jerusalem-donald-trump-israel-capital
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