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OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 6/27/19

Trump's "Deal of the Century"

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At this point Murray became adamant that this would never work. He predicted that Ibn Saud would interpret the offer as a bribe -- the offer of a throne in exchange for turning Palestine over to the Zionists. He would interpret the 20 million pounds as a "slush fund." Consequently, there was every reason to believe that the Saudi ruler would see this whole plan as a personal insult. So Murray suggested that "the less we have to do with the ... proposals of Dr. Weizmann the better."

As it turned out Roosevelt disagreed with Murray and after a conversation with Weizmann in early June of 1943, authorized an approach to Ibn Saud along the lines of the Zionist plan. Why did he ignore Murray in favor of Weizmann? Because Murray's accurate assessment of Ibn Saud conflicted with FDR's stereotyped view of Arabs. This is revealed in the minutes of the June meeting with Weizmann wherein the president said that "he believes the Arabs are purchasable." In other words, following a common Western view, the president saw the Arabs as a backward people who would do just about anything for the right amount of "bakshish."

Subsequently, the entire scheme came to naught when, in the fall of 1943, Ibn Saud rejected it out of hand. He would subsequently tell FDR that the Jews should "be given the choicest lands and homes of the Germans who had oppressed them." When the president replied that the Jews would not wish to stay in Germany after the war, Ibn Saud noted that the "allied camp" had "fifty countries" in it. Surely they could find enough open space (he even alluded to the underpopulated areas of the American West) to take in Europe's Jewish refugees. Roosevelt came away from the exchange rather shaken. He finally understood from it that "the Arabs mean business" when it comes to Palestine.

Part III -- Conclusion

The world has changed a lot since the 1940s. Ibn Saud has been replaced by the Saudi Crown Prince Mua' ¸ ¥ammad bin Salman. This can be seen as real step down in terms of personal integrity and strategic judgment. Franklin Roosevelt has been replaced with Donald Trump. I will let readers make their own judgments on this change. Actually, the thing that has stayed constant, perhaps because it was always devoid of real empathy for the Palestinians, is the nature of Zionist leadership. Thus, Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, has said that the only way the Palestinians can be economically liberated is through their political surrender. But as suggested above, Israel is now a confirmed apartheid state that feels its own "security" necessitates both military and economic control of the Palestinians.

Given that reality, Danon's notion of economic liberation means about as much as Weizmann's promise of someone else's (i.e., Britain's) money. And then there is the replacement of Chaim Weizmann (the Zionist pre-state leader) with Benjamin Netanyahu. The former may have had more persuasive charm than the latter, but certainly their goals were, and continue to be, the same.

It is Zionism's ambition to possess biblical Palestine that has reduced the Palestinians to destitution. Perfectly predictable and legal Palestinian resistance is the excuse the Israelis use to cover up the segregationist and impoverishing policies that are necessitated by their ideological worldview. And now Donald Trump and his Zionist son-in-law come forward with their plan, fully expecting the Palestinians to trust the Americans and their Israeli allies to make them "developed" and prosperous? I wonder what Ibn Saud would say to that?

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Lawrence Davidson is a history professor at West Chester University in Pennsylvania. He is the author of Foreign
Policy Inc.: Privatizing America's National Interest
; America's
Palestine: Popular and Offical Perceptions from Balfour to Israeli
Statehood
; and Islamic Fundamentalism. His academic work is focused on the history of American foreign relations with the Middle East. He also teaches courses in the history of science and modern European intellectual history.

His blog To The Point Analyses now has its own Facebook page. Along with the analyses, the Facebook page will also have reviews, pictures, and other analogous material.

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