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January 5, 2018 11:32 am
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Jewish Groups React to Trump’s Threats to Palestinians

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avatar by Rafael Medoff / JNS.org

US President Donald Trump at the White House. Photo: Reuters/Kevin Lamarque.

JNS.org – Many major Jewish organizations are expressing support for the idea of reducing US aid to the Palestinians, after President Donald Trump mentioned the possibility of a cut in a tweet this week.

In a January 2 tweet, the president wrote: “We pay the Palestinians HUNDRED OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS a year and get no appreciation or respect…with the Palestinians no longer willing to talk peace, why should we make any of these massive future payments to them?”

US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said the same day that Trump “doesn’t want to give any additional funding until the Palestinians agree to come back to the negotiation table.”

Some American aid to the Palestinians is sent to the Palestinian Authority (PA), some is given directly to Palestinian projects in PA-controlled areas and some is channeled through UN agencies that assist the Palestinians, such as the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East. The current annual US contribution to the Palestinians totals more than $600 million.

AIPAC spokesman Marshall Wittmann stated: “We have supported and continue to support reductions in assistance to the Palestinian Authority based on actions such as payments to families of terrorists and violation of its peace process commitment to direct talks with Israel, instead seeking to have the international community endorse Palestinian objectives.”

Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman and CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, said that the Palestinian Authority “has proven tone deaf to every previous US warning about its actions, so perhaps some reduction in aid would finally get its attention.”

Hoenlein said that the Trump administration “has a right to standards for aid that it provides, and where countries violate those standards, or trample human rights, then the US absolutely has a right to withhold aid — especially when all the US is asking the PA to do is to negotiate. That’s not exactly some major concession.”

“It is reasonable for the US to use foreign aid as one of several mechanisms for responding to instances where its own interests, or the interests of its allies, are threatened,” B’nai B’rith International said in a statement. “The Palestinians have refused to negotiate directly with Israel, have failed to comply with their obligations under previous agreements, and have chosen instead to pursue an anti-Israel, anti-US agenda at the United Nations.”

David Harris, CEO of the American Jewish Committee, said that “if the Palestinian Authority balks at advancing the peace process, or if it engages in anti-American rhetoric or behavior, then, of course, it’s appropriate to send a strong message of disapproval, including a cut in support.” At the same time, however, Harris cautioned that “what seems black-and-white from a distance may, in this case, entail at least a few shades of gray and some less-than-ideal options.”

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said Trump “is targeting the UN, Pakistan and now the Palestinian Authority as a businessperson rather than a politician, asking ‘Am I getting value for my money? If not, and the recipients use American taxpayers’ money to scorn the US, why should money continue to flow to them?’ Perhaps the shock therapy of the US not acting as an automatic ATM machine is a good thing.”

Farley Weiss, president of the National Council of Young Israel, which represents more than 100 Orthodox synagogues nationwide, went further. He said that US aid to the Palestinians “should not be contingent on their return to the negotiating table but on their change of policies that support terrorism and inculcate their children with hatred for Jews.” Until those policies are changed, Weiss, said, “we see no prospects for peace regardless of whether they resume peace talks.”

Kenneth Bob, president of Ameinu, formerly known as the Labor Zionist Alliance, said that he believes any reduction in US aid would be “counter-productive” because it could impact “essential Israeli-Palestinian security cooperation” and “important humanitarian aid.” Therefore, he said, “I do not see any positive outcome for Israel, the US or the Palestinians from a cut in aid.”

Dr. Michael Koplow, policy director of the dovish Israel Policy Forum, said that while “it is certainly appropriate for the US not to fund regimes that express anti-American sentiments,” that is outweighed by “the risk that reductions or cut-offs in aid will lead to even worse regimes or devastating security consequences.” He noted that the US gives aid to “states that often display mixed feelings about the US at best,” such as Pakistan and Egypt.

Former Democratic National Committee chairman Steve Grossman, who is also a former president of AIPAC, said that he “wouldn’t rule out using American aid to the Palestinians as a vehicle for putting pressure on the Palestinians to act in ways that are consistent with a peace process,” but that “it should only be done in extreme cases.”

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