American Presidents and Jerusalem

By (author) Ghada Hashem Talhami

Publication date:

26 April 2017

Length of book:

234 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9781498554282

Any casual observer of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict would immediately recognize that the holy city of Jerusalem is the core issue impeding a permanent peace settlement between the two antagonists. The religious symbolism of this city and its centrality to major religious faiths has never faded and has become increasingly vital to various strands of twentieth-century religious nationalisms. The political fate of Jerusalem was inevitably mired in international political struggles of the Cold War, particularly after the United States inherited Britain’s mantle as the ultimate arbiter of regional conflicts and strategic disputes. The asymmetrical balance of military power between Israel and Jordan made superpower intervention both inevitable and unpredictable.

This study examines the policies of twentieth-century US presidents regarding the status of Jerusalem. It traces the evolution of the United States’ embroilment in the politics of Mandatory Palestine, successive wars, and regimes that vied for control over Jerusalem, and tracks the conflicting historical narratives presented by various states in the region. It also takes a detailed look at the role of the American Jewish lobby, which constantly pressured the United States to overlook Israel’s refusal to go back to the lines of June 5, 1967, or to stop creating facts on the ground in East Jerusalem. The role of the oil lobby in seeking the reversal of Israeli annexationist steps in Jerusalem is also analyzed. The failure of several American presidents to broker an Arab–Israeli peace agreement is seen here as the result of the latitude enjoyed by presidential advisers in determining the main contours of American foreign policy in this region and guarding access to the chief executive in times of crisis. Finally, the book is an illustration of the perils of downplaying the human rights abuses of junior client states in order to placate national lobby groups in the Untied States, leading to the entrenchment of the Israeli state not only over Jerusalem, but throughout the West Bank.
Ghada Hashem Talhami has assiduously unveiled and documented the preeminent role of American presidents in the Zionist takeover of Jerusalem, despite their politically-pragmatic non-recognition of the city as Israel’s capital. Mining the Johnson presidential archives with laser focus on Israel’s gains from the 1967 war, she explicates the evolution of the US commitment to Israel’s aberrant political behavior, going beyond acceptance to strategic ally. She has brought to life often neglected Palestinian resistance actions to Israeli machinations. With analytical acuity, this study details the Zionist tactics used to prevent the internationalization of Jerusalem until the opportunity to gain control of all of it developed, as it did in 1967. Talhami’s book is unique in its focus on Jerusalem, though this emphasis is ably placed within the larger context of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. This readable work of scholarship spotlights the critical importance of Jerusalem to any settlement to the conflict.