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Discussion » Statements » Please let us reflect that this country has allowed Jared Kushner to preside over the dealings between USA and the Middle East.

Please let us reflect that this country has allowed Jared Kushner to preside over the dealings between USA and the Middle East.




In his role as the president’s special advisor, Kushner seems to have decided he can remake the entire Middle East. The results could be devastating
@BayoumiMoustafa

Sat 9 Dec 2017 10.10 EST
Last modified on Mon 11 Dec 2017 10.50 EST

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The entire Middle East, from Palestine to Yemen, appears set to burst into flames after this week. The region was already teetering on the edge, but recent events have only made things worse. And while the mayhem should be apparent to any casual observer, what’s less obvious is Jared Kushner’s role in the chaos.
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Kushner is, of course, the US president’s senior advisor and son-in-law. The 36-year-old is a Harvard graduate who seems to have a hard time filling in forms correctly.

He repeatedly failed to mention his meetings with foreign officials on his security clearance and neglected to report to US government officials that he was co-director of a foundation that raised money for Israeli settlements, considered illegal under international law. (He is also said to have told Michael Flynn last December to call UN security council members to get a resolution condemning Israeli settlements quashed. Flynn called Russia.)

In his role as the president’s special advisor, Kushner seems to have decided he can remake the entire Middle East, and he is wreaking his havoc with his new best friend, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, the 32-year-old who burst on to the international scene by jailing many members of his country’s ruling elite, including from his own family, on corruption charges.

Days before bin Salman’s unprecedented move, Kushner was with the crown prince in Riyadh on an unannounced trip. The men are reported to have stayed up late, planning strategy while swapping stories. We don’t know what exactly the two were plotting, but Donald Trump later tweeted his “great confidence” in bin Salman.

But the Kushner-bin Salman alliance moves far beyond Riyadh. The Saudis and Americans are now privately pushing a new “peace” deal to various Palestinian and Arab leaders that is more lop-sided toward Israel than ever before.

Ahmad Tibi, a Palestinian parliamentarian in the Israeli Knesset, explained the basic contours of the deal to the New York Times: no full statehood for Palestinians, only “moral sovereignty.” Control over disconnected segments of the occupied territories only. No capital in East Jerusalem. No right of return for Palestinian refugees.
Trump’s error on Jerusalem is a disaster for the Arab world … and the US too
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This is, of course, not a deal at all. It’s an insult to the Palestinian people. Another Arab official cited in the Times story explained that the proposal came from someone lacking experience but attempting to flatter the family of the American president. In other words, it’s as if Mohammed bin Salman is trying to gift Palestine to Jared Kushner, Palestinians be damned.

Next came Donald Trump throwing both caution and international law to the wind by recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
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But it’s not just Israel, either. Yemen is on the brink of a major humanitarian disaster largely because the country is being blockaded by Saudi Arabia. Trump finally spoke out against the Saudi measure this week, but both the state department and the Pentagon are said to have been privately urging Saudi Arabia and the UAE to ease their campaign against Yemen (and Lebanon and Qatar) for some time and to little impact. Why? Because Saudi and Emirati officials believe they “have tacit approval from the White House for their hardline actions, in particular from Donald Trump and his son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner,” journalist Laura Rozen reported.

The Kushner-bin Salman alliance has particularly irked secretary of state Rex Tillerson. Kushner reportedly leaves the state department completely out of his Middle Eastern plans. Of special concern to Tillerson, according to Bloomberg News, is Kushner’s talks with bin Salman regarding military action by Saudi Arabia against Qatar. The state department is worried of all the unforeseen consequences such a radical course of action would bring, including heightened conflict with Turkey and Russia and perhaps even a military response from Iran or an attack on Israel by Hezbollah.

Here’s where state department diplomacy should kick in. The US ambassador to Qatar could relay messages between the feuding parties to find a solution to the stand-off. So what does the ambassador to Qatar have to say about the Kushner-Salman alliance? Nothing, since there still is no confirmed ambassador to Qatar.

What about the US ambassador to Saudi Arabia? That seat’s also vacant. And the US ambassador to Jordan, Morocco, Egypt? Vacant, vacant, and vacant. What about assistant secretary for Near Eastern affairs, a chief strategic post to establish US policy in the region? No one’s been nominated. Deputy assistant secretary for press and public diplomacy? Vacant.

It’s partly this vacuum of leadership by Tillerson that has enabled Kushner to forge his powerful alliance with bin Salman, much to the detriment of the region. And in their zeal to isolate Iran, Kushner and bin Salman are leaving a wake of destruction around them.

The war in Yemen is only intensifying. Qatar is closer to Iran than ever. A final status deal between Israel and the Palestinians seems all but impossible now. The Lebanese prime minister went back on his resignation. And the Saudi state must be paying the Ritz-Carlton a small fortune to jail key members of the ruling family over allegations of corruption.

There’s a long history of American politicians deciding they know what’s best for the Middle East while buttressing their autocratic allies and at the expense of the region’s ordinary people. (The New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman has traditionally provided the rationale for America and its allies in the region, and his recent sycophantic portrayal of bin Salman certainly didn’t disappoint!)

But the Kushner-bin Salman alliance also represents something else. Both the US and Saudi Arabia are concentrating power into fewer and fewer hands. And with fewer people in the room, who will be around to tell these men that their ideas are so damaging? Who will dare explain to them how they already have failed?

Moustafa Bayoumi is the author of the award-winning books How Does It Feel To Be a Problem?: Being Young and Arab in America

Posted - January 22, 2018

Responses


  • 2658
    I read the article, interesting to say the least...  Stay tuned for a bigger M/E eruption..hopefully not... This post was edited by Beans/SilentGeneration at January 23, 2018 4:11 PM MST
      January 22, 2018 7:13 PM MST
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  • 5391
    Sharonna, you are asking us to reflect on a non-event, a false premise. WE the country did not “allow“ Kushner to preside over anything. There was no vote, no petition nor public consensus that put him in that role. He was/is a Presidential appointee, just as the verminous Sessions was appointed Attorny General.

    It’s even fair to say Kushner holds this post DESPITE what this country feels about it. 



    This post was edited by Don Barzini at January 23, 2018 6:33 PM MST
      January 22, 2018 7:17 PM MST
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  • 46117
    Well, since WE allow STILL the electoral college to dictate our choices, WE are letting Kushner do Trump's bidding.   And since we are letting Trump reign, we are allowing Russia free reign as well.  It's a mess as he is fond of saying.  But he is the one creating it.  

    No matter how you cut it, there are way more of us than there are of them and revolution is in the air or soon there will be no air left.  Or if there is any, it will be taxed unless you are in the top 1 percent.


      January 22, 2018 7:21 PM MST
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  • 5391
    No, WE aren’t letting him do anything.

    The Orange Narcissist got elected, but WE have no say in who he appoints, and have essentially no power to remove any of them directly, regardless of how bad they are. We are not responsible for his poor judgement, only forced to endure it. 

    Our “permission“ lies in only not rallying to assassinate Presidential appointees. This post was edited by Don Barzini at January 22, 2018 8:10 PM MST
      January 22, 2018 7:37 PM MST
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  • 46117
    You know what?  I don't care if you win the argument, it is just so refreshing to talk to someone on here that gets the fact that Trump is INSANE.  I feel like it's gotta be ME sometimes when I read back what these people are saying and defending.  GOD save us.

      January 22, 2018 7:39 PM MST
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  • 5391
    Oh yeah, the guy is out of his gourd. When all is said and done, he will be recognized as far and away the biggest mistake to ever hold the office. 

    I got him on my death pool:

    -By Stroke or Heart Attack 3:2

    -By spontaneous combustion 5:1

    -By assassination 6:1 (even money if he steps outside his Secret Service detail)

    -Demons drag him back to the infernal regions 18:1


    This post was edited by Don Barzini at January 23, 2018 4:12 PM MST
      January 22, 2018 7:57 PM MST
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