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 فورين بوليسي: عبثية التمسك بمحمود عباس

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فورين بوليسي: عبثية التمسك بمحمود عباس

تحت هذا العنوان نشرت دورية فورين بوليسي الامريكية مقالا لمراسلتها من بيروت 

(Anchal Vohra) بتاريخ 2021/05/24 قالت فيه:
في الوقت الذي يظل ميزان القوى يميل بوضوح لصالح إسرائيل ، شعر العديد من الفلسطينيين 

أن الجولة الأخيرة من الصراع جلبت لهم نصراً كبيراً لأن المفاوضات السلمية لم تسفر عن أي 

شيء.
لأول مرة منذ فترة طويلة ، أظهروا الفلسطينيون استياءهم من التجاوزات الإسرائيلية، وبدلاً 

من ابتلاع كبريائهم مرة أخرى والأمل في أن ينتبه العالم للتجاوزات. لقد اتحدوا ليس فقط في 

غضبهم من استخدام إسرائيل غير المتناسب والتعسفي للقوة ضد سكان غزة ولكن أيضًا في 

دعمهم لرد حماس على إسرائيل. ورأى الفلسطينيون وابل الصواريخ الذي تم إطلاقه على 

إسرائيل على أنه رد مناسب من قبل شعب ساخط وليس استفزازًا. وعند انتهاء المعركة، 

احتفل آلاف الفلسطينيين بالنصر.
أولئك الذين يعيشون داخل الأراضي المحتلة وكذلك ما يعرفون ب ( عرب 48) يفكرون الان 

في مزايا تنظيم حملة موسعة للمقاومة المسلحة لتكثيف نضالهم من أجل دولة فلسطينية 

مستقلة وضد الفصل العنصري الذي تمارسه إسرائيل. قال العديد ممن تحدثت معهم فورين 

بوليسي إنهم سئموا ببساطة انتظار محادثات أو اتفاقات تؤدي إلى دولة فلسطينية على طول 

الحدود كما تم تحديدها حتى عام 1967 – قبل ضم إسرائيل للقدس الشرقية. وقالوا إنهم 

سيدعمون انتفاضة مسلحة فقط لتذكير إسرائيل بأنهم لم يتخلوا عن حقهم في تقرير المصير 

ولن يقبلوا أبدًا بالوضع الراهن الذي ترغب إسرائيل في فرضه عليهم كأمر واقع.
يكمن في قلب إحباطهم تعنت إسرائيل واصرارها على تقوم بإدارة الصراع بدلاً من حله ، 

بالاضافة الى نظرتهم الى رئيسهم ، محمود عباس ، الذي يرى معظم الفلسطينيين أنه غير 

فعال وضعيف بل انه حريص على تحقيق الأمن الإسرائيلي على حساب حقوق الفلسطينيين. 

والازمة الاخيرة ادت من انحدار مكانته، الامر الذي سبب ضررا لاسرائيل، فيما تزداد شعبية 

حماس. يظن البعض في أن المزيد من الشبان الان يمكن ان يلبوا نداء حماس لحمل السلاح إذا 

ما شعروا أنه ليس لديهم خيارات أخرى ولا شيء يخسرونه. ويقول آخرون إن الأزمة أعطت 

زخماً لمطالبة حركتي حماس وفتح التي يتزعمها عباس لتوحيد المقاومة الفلسطينية، وإعادة 

تنظيمها، وإشعار إسرائيل أنه ستكون هناك تكلفة كبيرة إذا ما تباطأت إلى ما لا نهاية بشأن 

قرار مقبول للطرفين.
من الصعب تحديد أيهما سيتحقق ، لكن في نهاية المواجهة الأخيرة ، لم تحقق إسرائيل سوى 

القليل. ونجحت فقط في قتل المزيد من الضحايا، ولا يوجد سبب للاعتقاد بأنها ردعت حماس 

عن إطلاق الصواريخ مرة أخرى على المدن الإسرائيلية. وبدلاً من ذلك ، أدت سياساتها 

والنزاع الأخير الذي طال أمده بلا داعٍ إلى إضعاف عباس.
كل من إسرائيل والولايات المتحدة فضلتا عباس ليحل محل ياسر عرفات بعد وفاته في عام 

2004. وفي ديسمبر من ذلك العام أثناء ترشحه للرئاسة الفلسطينية ، دعا عباس إلى إنهاء 

العنف في الانتفاضة الثانية ، وهي انتفاضة كانت مستمرة منذ عام 2000. منذ ذلك الحين ، 

وفي الوقت الذي خاضت فيه حماس والجهاد الإسلامي المتمركزة في غزة حروبًا صغيرة 

بشكل متقطع مع إسرائيل ، كان النهج الأوسع للسلطة الفلسطينية بقيادة عباس هو الانخراط 

في محادثات مع إسرائيل والغرب لحل الأمور سلمياً.
لم تؤد المحادثات إلى اية نتيجة ، وإذا كان هناك أي أمل كان يمكن للفلسطينيين ان يتشبثوا به 

، فان دونالد ترامب قام بوأد هذا الامل وانهاه تماما عندما قام بنقل السفارة الأمريكية في 

إسرائيل إلى القدس ، المدينة المقدسة المتنازع عليها، في عام 2018.
عندما اقتحمت الشرطة الإسرائيلية المسجد الأقصى في رمضان ، ثبت أنها نقطة تحول. 

أطلقت حماس الصواريخ رداً على ذلك ، وشعر العديد من الفلسطينيين بالقوة ، وان هناك من 

كان مستعدا لفعل شيء ما، في الوقت الذي لم يكن هناك من يقف الى جانبهم بجد. سياسة 

الاعتدال والمفاوضات التي يتبناها عباس لم تنجح منذ سنوات. إن التفاوض المستمر أو 

المطالبة بالمفاوضات لم يكن مجرد أمر لا طائل من ورائه بل كان مهينًا أيضًا.
يتوقع الخبراء الفلسطينيون أن ترتفع شعبية وتقدير حماس بين الفلسطينيين في أعقاب 

الصراع الأخير ، وأن عباس سيفقد أي قدر ضئيل من المصداقية المتبقية لديه.
تم حظر حماس كمنظمة إرهابية من قبل العديد من الدول بما في ذلك الولايات المتحدة ولا 

يمكن أن تعتبرها أبدًا ممثلة للشعب الفلسطيني. حتى في أوساط الفلسطينيين ، بينما تزداد 

شعبيتها ، ما زال هناك عدد كاف من الذين ينتقدونها.
يبقى أن نرى ما إذا كان المزيد من الفلسطينيين سيختارون بالفعل الكفاح المسلح أو ما إذا 

كانت التصميم والاصرار سوف يتلاشى. كما أظهر ارتفاع تصنيفات حماس مدى اليأس الذي 

يشعرون به تجاه الدبلوماسية ومدى يأسهم لتغيير المسار.
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The Pointlessness of Mahmoud Abbas
After years in power, does the internationally recognized leader of the 

Palestinian people represent anyone beyond himself?
By Anchal Vohra, a Beirut-based columnist for Foreign Policy and a 

freelance TV correspondent and commentator on the Middle East.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas makes a speech to confirm 

that the Palestinian Authority will request full membership at the 

United Nations on Sept. 16, 2011 in Ramallah, West Bank.
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas makes a speech to confirm 

that the Palestinian Authority will request full membership at the 

United Nations on Sept. 16, 2011 in Ramallah, West Bank. THAER 

GANAIM /PPO VIA GETTY IMAGES
MAY 24, 2021, 11:56 AM
At 2 a.m. on Friday, an 11-day-long cycle of violence between Israelis 

and Palestinians came to an end as a cease-fire brokered by Egypt 

was enforced by both sides. The rockets fired by the Islamist 

Palestinian group Hamas and Israeli airstrikes on the besieged Gaza 

Strip only went silent, however, after claiming 12 Israeli and around 

250 Palestinian lives. While the balance of power clearly tilted in 

Israel’s favor, a superior military power, many Palestinians felt the 

recent round of conflict brought them a tiny but significant victory 

since peaceful negotiations have yielded nothing.

For the first time in a long time, Palestinians felt they actively 

displayed their resentment against Israeli excesses instead of yet 

again swallowing their pride and merely hoping for the world to take 

notice. They were united not only in their anger at Israel’s 

disproportionate use of force on Gazans but also in their support of 

Hamas’s response to Israel. Palestinians saw the barrage of rockets 

fired at Israel as a befitting reply on behalf of a disaffected people, not 

a provocation. As the battle came to an end without either side 

conceding, thousands of Palestinians celebrated.

Those inside occupied territories as well as those living as Israeli 

citizens inside Israel, experts said, are pondering the merits of again 

organizing an extended campaign of armed resistance to intensify 

their struggle for an independent Palestinian state and against alleged 

apartheid by Israel. Many of those with whom Foreign Policy spoke 

said that they were simply tired of waiting for talks or accords to lead 

to a separate state along the borders as they were defined until 

1967—before Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem. They said they 

would support an armed uprising if only to remind Israel that they 

were not giving up on their right to self-determination and will never 

accept the status quo that Israel wished to impose on them as fait 

accompli.

At the heart of their frustration is an obstinate Israel that wants to 

manage rather than resolve the conflict, but also their own president, 

Mahmoud Abbas, whom most Palestinians see as ineffective, weak, 

and at times even bidding for Israeli security over Palestinians’ rights. 

The recent crisis has furthered his decline, to the detriment of Israel, 

while Hamas is expected to rise in popularity. Some suspect that more 

young men could obey Hamas’s call to arms if they feel they have no 

other options and nothing to lose. Others say the crisis has given an 

impetus to Abbas’s Fatah—the largest faction in the multiparty 

Palestine Liberation Organization—and Hamas to unite, reorganize 

the Palestinian resistance, and show Israel that there would be a cost 

if it dragged its feet ad infinitum on a resolution acceptable to both 

sides.

It is hard to say if either will materialize, but at the end of the recent 

crisis, Israel has achieved little. It succeeded in causing more 

casualties, but there is no reason to believe that it deterred Hamas 

from firing rockets again on Israeli cities. Instead, its policies and the 

needlessly protracted recent conflict weakened Abbas—Israel’s most 

pragmatic enemy.

Abbas, seen as a moderate, was preferred both by Israel and the 

United States to replace Yasser Arafat, a controversial figure in the 

West but a leader who enjoyed undisputed legitimacy in the 

Palestinian community. After Arafat’s death in 2004, Abbas indeed 

was chosen as the leader of Fatah, and in December of that year while 

running for the Palestinian presidency, he called for an end to 

violence in the Second Intifada, an uprising that had been ongoing 

since 2000. Ever since, while Hamas and Islamic Jihad based out of 

Gaza have sporadically fought mini-wars with Israel, the broader 

approach of the Abbas-led Palestinian Authority—which is 

considered the representative of the Palestinian people by the 

international community—has been to engage in talks with Israel and 

the West to resolve matters peacefully.

The talks have led nowhere, and if there was any hope the 

Palestinians were clinging to, it was quashed by former U.S. President 

Donald Trump, who relocated the U.S. Embassy in Israel to 

Jerusalem, the disputed holy city, in 2018. As Israeli police stormed 

into Al-Aqsa Mosque this Ramadan, it proved to be a tipping point. 

Hamas fired rockets in response, and many Palestinians felt 

empowered, as if someone, when no one was speaking for them, was 

doing something. Abbas’s politics of moderation and negotiations, 

many said, had not been working for years. They said that endlessly 

negotiating or pleading for negotiations was not only pointless but 

also humiliating.

Palestinian experts expect that Hamas will rise in the estimation of 

Palestinians in the wake of the recent conflict and Abbas will lose 

whatever little credibility he was left with. Ali Jarbawi, a former 

minister in the government of the Palestinian Authority and a 

political analyst, said the hopelessness with the defunct peace process 

among people was palpable and is expected to increase support for 

Hamas. “I think there would be more support for Hamas’s armed 

resistance, also because Palestinian moderates like Abbas do not have 

a good partner in Israel,” Jarbawi said. “Hamas will mobilize more 

people, yes, sure. But what are our options? There is no other way 

than armed resistance. There is no hope with negotiations, as they are 

an endless process. The armed resistance finally gave people some 

hope.”

Mustafa Barghouti, a Palestinian politician who serves as the general 

secretary of a political party called the Palestinian National Initiative 

and has been a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council since 

2006, said that after the recent crisis the Palestinians have found 

military resistance to be more successful than diplomacy. “The last 

thing people want to see is the repetition of the past, interim 

agreements, and such,” Barghouti said. “We need to decide what our 

political strategy should be and which form of struggle—armed or 

peaceful—to deploy when. The general consensus is to use popular 

nonviolent resistance but also military resistance when it is in self-

defense.”


Dana El Kurd, an assistant professor at the Doha Institute for 

Graduate Studies, said Abbas’s lack of credibility was based on his 

many failings. “He has been overstaying his term limit,” she said, 

referring to how Abbas has been president since 2005.

“The fact that he presides over [the] Palestinian Authority that since 

’94 hasn’t achieved any of its goals and seems to be acting as an 

impediment to Palestinian liberation,” said Kurd, is another reason 

people are really fed up with him. When Abbas indefinitely postponed 

elections, supposed to be held last month after a hiatus of 15 years, 

many said he was afraid of losing. “On top of that, the Palestinian 

police stopping people from protesting at the beginning of the crisis in 

response to what was happening in Jerusalem really pissed people 

off,” Kurd added.

Barghouti, however, sympathized with Abbas and called him a 

“victim” of Israelis and Americans, a man who believed their 

promises and put all his energy into making peace through 

negotiations only. “Israelis failed him, and the international 

community failed him,” he said. He added that Abbas was now under 

pressure to establish a unified leadership: “We have already sent 

letters to all 14 political parties to meet, unite, and discuss a 

strategy.”

Yet others say that 85-year-old Abbas has nothing to worry about and 

will be president for life, as no one has been groomed to take over or 

challenge him. Mustafa Barghouti’s distant cousin Marwan 

Barghouti, who is seen as a leader of the First and Second Intifadas, is 

a strong challenger, and according to an opinion poll by the 

Jerusalem Media and Communications Centre, would have garnered 

more votes than Abbas if the elections had happened. But he is rotting 

in an Israeli prison, condemned to serve to five life sentences plus 40 

years. There is also Mohammed Dahlan, the Palestinian who is 

believed to have played a role in Israel’s normalization deal with the 

United Arab Emirates and is in fact based in the UAE. He is backed 

by the Emiratis and was reportedly backed by the Trump 

administration too, but he has little legitimacy inside Palestinian 

territories. Hamas is proscribed as a terrorist organization by many 

countries including the United States and can never be seen as a 

representative of the Palestinian people by the international 

community. Even among the Palestinians, while its popularity might 

rise, there are still enough who criticize it.

Yara spoke to Foreign Policy by telephone from a street in Gaza that 

had been severely pounded. She feared a threat to her security and 

requested anonymity. “The fact that Hamas responded—regardless of 

how effective it is—Palestinians feel someone speaking for them,” she 

said. “But that does not mean we want to vote for Hamas or be 

governed by them. People don’t want Hamas, because it’s a religious 

party.”

It remains to be seen if more Palestinians will actually opt for an 

armed struggle or if as anger subsidies the energy will simply fizzle 

out. While Hamas’s ratings might spike, many Palestinians are keenly 

aware of the group’s shortcomings and oppose its politics. 

Nonetheless, their support for Hamas’s rockets showed just how 

despondent they are with diplomacy and how desperate they are for a 

change of course.
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What Biden Is—and Isn’t—Willing to Do for Palestinians
The new U.S. president wants to help, but he may not be prepared to 

pay the price.
By James Traub, a nonresident fellow at New York University’s 

Center on International Cooperation and a columnist at Foreign 

Policy.


97605574.jpg?resize=1536,1024&quality=90





What Biden Is—and Isn’t—Willing to Do for Palestinians
The new U.S. president wants to help, but he may not be prepared to 

pay the price.
By James Traub, a nonresident fellow at New York University’s 

Center on International Cooperation and a columnist at Foreign 

Policy.
Joe Biden waves alongside Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas 

prior to their meeting on March 10, 2010 in Ramallah, West Bank.
Joe Biden waves alongside Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas 

prior to their meeting on March 10, 2010 in Ramallah, West Bank. 

URIEL SINAI/GETTY IMAGES
MAY 14, 2021, 7:36 AM
In its first few months in office, the Biden administration began to 

slowly roll out a new policy towards Israel and Palestine. The 

measured pace was itself telling, for the administration has been 

relentlessly focused on what is most pressing—addressing the 

pandemic and the accompanying economic crisis. And here, as 

elsewhere, former President Donald Trump’s blithe abandonment of 

longstanding American policy gave President Joe Biden’s skeletal 

staff of Middle East officials plenty of unraveling and restitching to 

do. In a policy memo drawn up in February and titled: “The US-

Palestinian Reset and the Path Forward,” officials suggested 

reattaching the “connective tissue” destroyed in recent years, 

reaffirming a two-state solution and restoring funding to Palestinians.

Officials thought they had plenty of time. They were wrong: Violence 

has once again exploded in the region, in ways both sickeningly 

familiar and frighteningly new. This time it was Jewish settlers and 

the Israeli government who first upset a very brittle status quo, by 

threatening to evict Palestinians from a disputed neighborhood in 

occupied East Jerusalem and by attacking Palestinians gathered at 

the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem and then at the Al-Aqsa Mosque 

after Friday prayers. Palestinians responded with provocations of 

their own and then Hamas began firing rockets into Israel with the 

goal of terrorizing civilians. Israel has responded with airstrikes and 

now ground troops. War, in the peculiar and almost ritualistic form it 

takes in the region, has broken out for the first time since 2014.

The Biden administration, caught unawares, has responded in time-

worn fashion, publicly reassuring Israel of steadfast support while 

stating that it is “deeply concerned” by the ongoing evictions and 

home demolition in East Jerusalem. Though officials are now working 

with Egypt, Jordan, and the Gulf countries to end the violence, the 

modest level of engagement has delivered an implicit message: Can’t 

you see we’re working on infrastructure?

There is an emerging pattern here. As I wrote recently about refugee 

policy, this administration has thoughtful, enlightened policy on 

almost everything but is not about to let it get in the way of the chief 

business at hand. Just as the administration’s panicked initial 

response to an unexpected crisis at the border was to violate its own 

principles by refusing to admit refugees, so its reflex in the face of a 

sudden outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East was to put aside its 

commitment to more just outcomes for Palestinians. Nor is it a 

coincidence that in both cases the administration chose not to brave 

political headwinds. In the case of the refugees, the administration 

saw its error and reversed course. It’s still early days in this latest 

Gaza war/intifada/insurrection.

The war with Gaza will presumably end, as it has in the past, with 

both sides having inflicted so much suffering on the other—though 

with Israel having inflicted vastly more—that both can declare 

victory and call it a day. But that may not change the conflict inside 

Israel, which for the first time pits Jewish against Arab citizens. 

Coupled with the rising tensions in East Jerusalem, the very personal 

violence in Israeli cities could radicalize both sides and deepen 

polarization. The current wave of violence, after all, began with 

right-wing Jews mobs marching through East Jerusalem shouting, 

“Death to the Arabs!”

It’s not at all unimaginable that an increasingly nationalistic Israeli 

state could formalize Arabs’ second-class status in the way that Prime 

Minister Narendra Modi has done to Indian Muslims. Though Human 

Rights Watch has been harshly described for accusing Israel in a 

recent report of committing the crime of apartheid in the occupied 

territories, in a poll taken in February an overwhelming majority of 

American scholars of the Middle East described the current situation 

in the West Bank and Gaza as “a one-state reality akin to apartheid.” 

That’s the status quo. Arabs living in Israel have a vastly better life 

than those in the territories, but they, too, may have lost patience with 

their second-class status.

And so the question of what outsiders can do once the violence does 

end has a new urgency. Here, too, ritual has ruled in the past: 

American diplomats call for an end to hostilities so that the so-called 

peace process can resume, and then one futile meeting follows 

another. Israel has spent decades producing “facts on the ground”—

in the form of settlements, walls, critical infrastructure—that make a 

two-state solution logistically and politically impossible. In any case, 

neither Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu nor Palestinian 

Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has been prepared to make the 

very painful concessions required for a two-state solution. 

Nevertheless, as regional analyst Nathan Thrall noted in a landmark 

2014 piece, “A decent chance of success has never been a 

prerequisite” for the peace process.” Negotiation, Thrall wrote, 

“offers its own rewards, quite apart from its ostensible purposes.” 

One of those rewards is reducing the pressure for actual reforms to 

improve the lives of Palestinians.

The peace process charade came to an end with Trump, who promised 

to solve the insoluble only to end up promulgating a formula that 

effectively eliminated a Palestinian state or even a negotiating role for 

the Palestinians. Trump was the first American president to inter the 

two-state solution. Last summer a Biden campaign adviser suggested 

to me that Biden, too, might accept the inevitable, though he would do 

so in order to focus on improving the lot of Palestinians rather than to 

marginalize them. In fact, Biden has publicly embraced a two-state 

solution, as does the State Department policy memo; he has been a 

passionate supporter of Israel for decades. But Biden watched two 

secretaries of State, Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, fail at Middle 

East peace, and he has zero appetite for martyrdom. The word 

around the White House is, “We’re not going for a Nobel Peace Prize 

here.”

Publicly committing yourself to a two-state solution while devoting 

your actual efforts to improving the condition of Palestinians is an 

entirely defensible strategy. But how? The Administration has already 

pledged $235 million to the Palestinians through the U.N. Relief and 

Works Agency (UNRWA) and direct grants. Biden hopes to restore 

the Palestinian mission in Washington and the U.S. Consulate General 

in Jerusalem, both eliminated under Trump—but the first would 

require Congressional approval, and the second, Israeli approval. The 

Department of State memo also apparently suggested opening a 

consulate in the Palestinian territories.

READ MORE

Israeli soldiers looks on during clashes with Palestinian youth in the 

city center of the occupied West Bank town of Hebron on April 24, 

2021.
Israel’s War Will Never End
For Israelis and Palestinians, ethnic violence isn't a temporary 

problem. It’s a lasting identity.

VOICE | STEVEN A. COOK
Those are worthwhile, but modest measures. One more substantive 

approach, suggested by Brian Katulis, a Middle East expert at the 

Center for American Progress, is to focus on economic development, 

pressing Israel to provide more reliable water and electricity in the 

West Bank and Gaza and to offer building permits in West Bank 

settlements that would enable the growth of new businesses. Katulis 

also notes that the Arab states that have signed the “Abraham 

Accords” pledging “cooperation and dialogue” with Israel—the UAE, 

Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan—have “largely stood on the sidelines” 

during the conflict, but could, with careful American guidance, 

become key sources of economic and technical support for the 

Palestinians.

This would not, however, address the “apartheid” problem. Any 

attempt to do so would place the Biden administration on a collision 

course not only with Israel but with the U.S. Congress, where 

Netanyahu enjoys wider support than he does in Israel. For example, 

Daniel Levy, head of the Middle East Project (and author of a recent 

piece on the issue in FP) argues that Palestinians will not have a 

legitimate government capable of advancing their interests unless 

Mahmoud Abbas can be persuaded to work with Hamas, his archrival 

for his people’s loyalty. (Earlier this month Abbas called off long-

planned elections out of fear he would lose.) Levy is absolutely right 

about the need to bring Hamas inside the governing tent. Even if 

Biden agrees—which he may not—blessing such a union would 

violate his no-martyrdom rule. He may be able to live without 

Netanyahu, but he can’t live without Chuck Schumer.

Where, then, is the line between “very hard” and “don’t bother”? 

Whatever Biden decides to do, he will have to work through the 

Abrahamic countries as well as Egypt and Jordan and perhaps Qatar, 

each of which has various degrees of leverage both with Israel and 

with the Palestinians. Among his goals should be ending the crushing 

blockade in Gaza, freeing up travel within the West Bank, ending 

eviction and demolition, strengthening Palestinian self-governance, 

addressing the grievances of Israeli Arabs, and cracking down on 

violence by right-wing groups, some of whom belong to Netanyahu’s 

own governing coalition.

Any of these goals would have been very hard to reach even during 

the more settled moment of Trump’s tenure; now, in the aftermath of 

Hamas attacks on Israeli cities and in the midst of an interminable 

political struggle inside Israel, it looks nigh impossible. There will be 

an overwhelming temptation to say, “This is not what we have in mind 

by ‘a foreign policy for the middle class.’” But as former President 

Barack Obama learned to his vast chagrin, walking away from the 

Middle East is not an option. The tension between rising Jewish 

nationalism and an increasingly restive Arab population both inside 

the country and in the Territories may no longer be sustainable. 

Biden has been carefully hoarding his political capital; he may have 

to spend some where he least wants to.

James Traub is a nonresident fellow at New York University’s Center 

on International Cooperation and a columnist at Foreign Policy, and 

author of the book What Was Liberalism? The Past, Present and 

Promise of A Noble Idea.
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https://shanti.jordanforum.net
 
فورين بوليسي: عبثية التمسك بمحمود عباس
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