Shhhh…Jordan’s King Abdullah and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu in talks about how to ‘neutralize’ US Secretary of State John Kerry
From Bare Naked Islam
Secretary of State John Kerry’s
effusive optimism regarding the ‘peace’ talks have been a source of
concern not only to Netanyahu, but also to King Abdulla II of Jordan.
The two leaders’ ‘secret’ meeting yesterday in Amman— made public almost
immediately by the Jordanians—was devoted to one issue: Jordan is very
unhappy about the possibility that Israel would take the IDF out of the
Jordan Valley.
Jewish Press
According to Makor Rishon, the Jordanians don’t care if the plan is to
remove the IDF now, or in 10 or even in 50 years. They don’t want Israel
out of that stretch of land across the water, period.
The immediate outcome of the two
neighboring leaders getting together, a Jordanian source told Makor
Rishon, is another devaluation of the chances of Kerry coming up with a
comprehensive plan.
“If, two weeks ago, there was a
fifty-fifty chance that such a document be presented, now that chance is
much lower,” the source said. “For now, the Americans believe they’d be
able to draft a paper, but they’ve been running into bigger and bigger
difficulties. It’s possible that in the end they’ll put nothing on the
table, or they’d put down something and say, ‘Take it or leave it.’
Maybe they’ll degrade the document’s contents, to enable both sides to
accept it—but that would also mean that whatever achievement they
reached over these past months will be lost, and that would also be
problematic.”
Israel and Jordan have been
maintaining an effective security cooperation along Israel’s eastern
border. When asked in private, the Jordanians are vehemently opposed to
having Palestinian forces posted along the river, preferring without
hesitation the current arrangement. But, obviously, they can’t say that
publicly.
If the security plan of General George
Allen is implemented, Jordan would have to change its own security
alignment long the river. The plan calls
for international, Israeli and Palestinian forces to be posted, and the
Jordanians—like anyone who hasn’t drunk Kerry’s Kool Aid—know this will
only mean trouble.
Israel has had a generally quiet and
prosperous peace with its neighbor to the east, with Israeli factories
moving to the Hashemite side, attracted by the cheap labor, and the two
countries sticking to their mutual commitments, including Israel’s
obligation to provide Jordan with its share of the Kinneret water, rain
or shine.
Much of that tranquility can be
attributed to the fact that both countries’ security communities have
developed an atmosphere of trust and cooperation, and so they’ve been
able to bock whatever mayhem going on in the PA from spreading east into
Jordan.
In yesterday’s meeting, both Netanyahu
and Abdullah praised the success of the past 20 years. They reassured
each other that the system ain’t broke and needs no fixing, thank you
very much. This would go a long way to lose Kerry friends not just in
AIPAC, but in the Democratic Senate and, hopefully, Vice President
Biden.
Despite everything Biden may be saying
publicly in support of his president’s aspirations, he is an old
foreign policy hand, with an intimate familiarity with the Middle East.
Surely, he knows how volatile Jordan is already, and how much more
threatened would the king’s rule should the IDF pull out from his
western flank.
It cannot be stressed enough that the
king belongs to an endangered minority in Jordan, the 20% or so of
Bedouin tribesmen loyal to him. The rest of his citizens are
Palestinians who have arrived over the past seven decades. They’re doing
well there, and when they don’t, the Legion and the secret police make
sure they behave, occasionally massacring them by the tens of thousands.
But permit a direct, daily contact
between armed Palestinian forces and the Hashemite Kingdom, and the
fireworks would start shortly thereafter. Jordan already is a home to
1.2 million Syrian refugees. Crime is on the rise, employment is down,
gun purchases are up. Jordan’s office of the interior said some 120
thousand weapons were sold there last year, and an estimated 1 million
unregistered weapons are in circulation.
Jordan does not want another porous
border. This is why King Abdullah insists on being informed about the
negotiations, if not on actually being a participant. He’s also been
opposed to the fast pace of Kerry’s team. His former prime minister,
Ma’ruf al-Bakhit, working on behalf of the king, has been recommending
to the Palestinians to slow things down.
The fun never stops.
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