From Jeremy Ben-Ami, J Street <[email protected]>
Subject Thoughts from J Street on the terrible escalation in Israel and the Palestinian Territory
Date May 12, 2021 9:49 PM
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[ [link removed] ] [ [link removed] ]J Street [ [link removed] ]
Dear Friend,

With immense sadness and frustration, I write, not for the first time, in
the midst of a serious escalation in violence in Israel and the occupied
Palestinian Territory.

All of us at J Street hold in our hearts at this difficult time our
friends, family and loved ones in the line of fire -- including members of
J Street’s own staff who have spent the past day and night in and out of
shelters. We are thinking as well of all of the Palestinian and Israeli
families who are grieving losses and tending to the wounded.

While this moment bears resemblance to painful memories of prior rounds of
conflict, the present violence is at the same time radically different.
Some observers are calling the past 24 hours a “civil war” within Israel
itself as unprecedented scenes of fighting and violence are playing out in
mixed Jewish-Arab cities in Israel.

Just days ago, we watched with growing alarm as efforts by radical Israeli
settler groups to force Palestinian families from their East Jerusalem
homes inflamed tensions and violence.

Thankfully, Israel’s Supreme Court postponed a decision about the
evictions, but harsh police crackdowns against Palestinian protesters in
Sheikh Jarrah and then at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound on the Temple Mount
-- during the holiday of Ramadan -- sparked outrage across the city and
the wider region.

And now, tragically, with Hamas and other terrorist groups in Gaza firing
rockets indiscriminately at Israeli cities and Israel responding with
massive airstrikes, there are at least 56 Palestinians killed in Gaza and
at least seven Israelis killed -- including, horrifically, children on
both sides. Many more have been wounded.

J Street supports Israel’s right to defend its citizens against rockets
and acts of terror -- which we unequivocally condemn.

The tragedy of this situation is that we know the cycle of retaliation,
rockets and more retaliation will do nothing to provide long-term security
for Israelis and will only leave more devastation for Gaza, many more
deaths and injuries and deeper fear and hate in its wake.

J Street’s role is to outline what we would like the United States to do
at moments like this, so here’s the agenda we’re putting forward to the
Biden administration:

First, make addressing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict a priority once
again.

While resolution of the conflict should not -- and we recognize will not
-- be at the very top of the administration’s priority list, a “hands-off
approach” is not a policy either. Inattention to the conflict allows
tensions to escalate that can then explode into precisely the kind of
violence we are witnessing over the past 24-48 hours.

The administration’s top priority now must be to get Israel and Hamas to
de-escalate and agree to a ceasefire. We’re also urging the administration
to make clear publicly that Israeli efforts to evict and displace
Palestinian families in East Jerusalem and the West Bank are unacceptable,
as is the use of excessive force against protesters.

If you’ve not yet had the chance, I’d encourage you to add your name now
to our petition calling for both immediate action, and a sustained
diplomatic effort to support the rights of both Israelis and Palestinians
to peace, security and self-determination.

[ [link removed] ]Read
and sign the petition now

Beyond a push to stop the fighting immediately, the administration should
quickly appoint a Special Envoy to direct and coordinate policy related to
the conflict. The envoy’s mandate should be not to coordinate a return to
the “status quo ante,” but to actually address the underlying issues that
lead to regular outbreaks of violence -- namely the unsustainability of
permanent occupation of Palestinian territory and of governing millions of
people who live there without full rights.

Next, the administration should immediately reverse steps taken by the
Trump administration that have deepened the conflict and damaged America’s
ability to be a mediator and arbiter. During its first 100 days, the Biden
administration reversed some of the damage, but there is much, much more
still to be done.

In particular, in Jerusalem, the US and the international community need
to get Israel to stop the ongoing evictions and displacements in East
Jerusalem’s Arab neighborhoods. Radical right-wingers in Israel seeking to
establish full Jewish sovereignty over the city and to change the status
quo on the Temple Mount are playing with fire. The US must convey to the
government of Israel that these actions must stop and that the potential
for two capitals for two states in the city must be maintained.

Finally, the time has come for a reset of US policy overall when it comes
to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Unfortunately, instead of easing the
conflict over time, American policy contributed to making it ever deeper
and never-ending.

The provision of a financial and diplomatic “blank check” by the United
States to the state of Israel means that its current government feels
little incentive to end occupation, pursue serious diplomacy or find a
permanent solution to the conflict that provides Israel with real security
and Palestinians with their rights. While remaining committed to Israel’s
security and to the full amount of assistance currently promised to
Israel, the US must recognize that by allowing US-sourced military
equipment -- including equipment bought with US aid -- to be used in
connection with evictions, demolitions and settlement expansion, it is
facilitating the ongoing creeping annexation of Palestinian territory and
cementing a permanent undemocratic and unacceptable one-state reality.
That must stop.

It has to be noted that the bluff has also been called on the illusion
presented by the prior administration with the encouragement of Israel’s
right wing that somehow normalizing relations with Gulf States while
circumventing the Palestinians can substitute for actual conflict
resolution and peace.

It is Israelis and Palestinians who have been fighting for nearly a
century now over the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean
-- not Israelis and Emiratis or the Sudanese. It is the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict that needs to be addressed not ignored.

Friend, this is a painful and difficult situation -- and many
parties bear responsibility, from Hamas terrorists to far-right Kahanists
to irresponsible politicians stoking tensions and hate. The US can’t wave
a magic wand to bring it all to a peaceful end.

But it also can’t walk away.

Our government must do so much more to put real weight behind
easily-uttered verbal commitments to peace, human rights and a two-state
solution.

Together, we will continue to press the Biden administration and Congress
-- as well our own communal leadership -- to chart a course that ensures
that the rights and safety of both Israelis and Palestinians are
respected, to move Israel away from the destructive path of permanent
occupation and de facto annexation and to support Palestinians who are
committed to a nonviolent, diplomatic resolution to the conflict.

Thank you for your support in sustaining this important work,

Jeremy Ben-Ami
President, J Street


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J Street is the political home for pro-Israel, pro-peace Americans who want
Israel to be secure, democratic and the national home of the Jewish people.
Working in American politics and the Jewish community, we advocate policies that
advance shared US and Israeli interests as well as Jewish and democratic values,
leading to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.



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