With fire kites and rocket firings, Hamas is "pushing Israel to engage
in increasingly significant acts of self-defense," the group added.
By Michael Wilner
NEW YORK -- Senior Trump administration officials are placing full
blame on Hamas for an increasingly dangerous military standoff with
Israel in Gaza.
Four members of the administration responsible with crafting Israel
policy penned an op-ed in CNN on Saturday claiming a "paradigm shift" is
under way at the UN, in which member states are for the first time
placing blame for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza on Hamas militants.
Pressuring Hamas is critical, the US team asserted, in its effort to
broker peace between Israelis and Palestinians– and in staving off a new
war in the region.
With fire kites and rocket firings, Hamas is "pushing Israel to engage
in increasingly significant acts of self-defense," the group added.
Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law and senior adviser; Jason
Greenblatt, US special representative for international negotiations;
Nikki Haley, ambassador to the United Nations; and David Friedman,
ambassador to Israel, wrote the piece.
They cite a vote that took place last month in the General Assembly,
when Algeria proposed a resolution criticizing Israel's treatment of
Palestinians in Gaza without referencing Hamas. Algeria tried– and
failed– to shut down debate on a US amendment that would have added
condemnation of Hamas.
"Nothing like this had ever been done before at the United Nations.
Hundreds of resolutions passed by the General Assembly dealing with the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict have failed even to mention Hamas," the
group wrote. "When the amendment came to a vote, a miracle by UN
standards happened. Although the measure ultimately failed for technical
reasons, more nations voted for holding Hamas accountable with the US
amendment than against it."
"For the first time in the United Nations, more nations than not
acknowledged that peace between Israel and the Palestinian people must
be built on a foundation of truth regarding Hamas," the US team added.
"They recognized that reconciliation is impossible if reality is denied
for the sake of scoring political points. And part of that reality is
recognizing the primary responsibility Hamas bears in perpetuating the
suffering of the people of Gaza."
The four top officials said that Donald Trump's decision to recognize
Jerusalem as Israel's capital– a controversial decision widely condemned
by the international community, but praised by Israelis and the
president's political base– would serve as a model in their larger
Middle East peace plan, which the White House plans to unveil by the end
of the year.
"That foundation of reality underscores our administration's approach to
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict," the group said. "The peace proposal
we will make will be similarly realistic, recognizing the legitimate
needs of both Israel and the Palestinians as well as the interests of
the broader region."
"No one will be fully pleased with our proposal," they added, "but
that's the way it must be if real peace is to be achieved. Peace can
only succeed if it is based on realities. "
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