• Publications
    • Books
    • Opinions
    • Analyses
    • Reports
  • Events
  • About
    • SETA DC
    • People
  • US-Türkiye Relations
  • Washington Gündemi
  • Contact
  • info@setadc.org
    202-223-9885
    1025 Connecticut Ave NW
    Suite 410
    Washington, DC 20036
  • Publications
    • Books
    • Opinions
    • Analyses
    • Reports
  • Events
  • About
    • SETA DC
    • People
  • US-Türkiye Relations
  • Washington Gündemi
  • Contact

Middle Eastern balances after UN resolution on Jerusalem

Burhanettin Duran Posted On December 27, 2017
0
191 Views


U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to withhold aid to countries that vote in favor of the U.N. resolution rejecting his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel did not change the outcome. Despite the pressure inflicted on countries individually by warning that the names of naysayers would be taken, world states left the U.S. alone. A total of 128 countries in the U.N. General Assembly voted in favor of the draft that was led by Turkey and Yemen, nine voted against it and 35 countries abstained, reaffirming the U.N. Security Council Resolution 478. The belief in a two-state solution and “a comprehensive, fair and permanent peace based on the Madrid Principles, Arab Peace Initiative and Middle East Quartet Road Map” was consolidated. Of course, it is not possible to force Israel into the peace process without U.S. pressure in current power balances.

Nevertheless, this resolution, which shows the legitimacy of the idea of “the Palestinian state with east Jerusalem as the capital city” in the eyes of international community, will go down in history as the beginning of a new era. First of all, Trump’s nationalist approach based on naked power gave rise to an irreversible crisis of legitimacy about the U.S.’s global role. The loneliness the U.S. experienced in the U.N. during the Jerusalem voting is not just a defeat to screw up faces. It is also the reality of the new world that shows how the selfish approach of a super power that clearly said to have walked away from its responsibilities will be met.


President Donald Trump’s threat to withhold aid to countries that vote in favor of the U.N. resolution rejecting his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel did not change the outcome.


While saying this, I am not underestimating the current global military and economic strength of the U.S. It is also clear that China and Russia are not in a position to replace this power. Above all, Washington, which invests hundreds of billions of dollars in the defense industry, has the highest level of military power that enables it to intervene in any place in which it sees economic interests.

However, the U.S. is nowadays subverting the “liberal order” that it established, and obviously, it will have difficulty dealing with the chaos it created even in the short run. For instance, the Jerusalem issue once again showed the divergence within the Western alliance.

Some of the central and eastern European countries abstained from voting due to U.S. pressure, but the EU’s leading countries opposed Trump’s approach. The Israeli expansion has come to the agenda of the people of the world as a “justice” issue. Given that Trump’s new security strategy is based on power rather than norms, our world is stepping into an era where new power struggles are intense.

Also, a fierce power struggle is lying ahead of the Middle East. The line of polarization that became evident before the Jerusalem crisis was between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The U.S. was accelerating this struggle, claiming that missiles launched on Riyadh were of Iranian origin. Turkey, pioneering in the Jerusalem issue, put the Gulf states in an awkward position. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s desire to impose a peace plan on Palestine, which is known as an initiative by Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, is now in serious trouble. For this reason, countries such as the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which are known to have been behind attacks on Ankara for several years, are directly targeting President Erdoğan.

UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan’s retweet that accused Fahreddin Pasha, the defender of Medina during World War I, of transporting holy relics to Istanbul, is not a symbolic quarrel alone. It concerns the intention of Arab nationalism, toward which the Saudi crown prince has fronted with the rhetoric of “moderate Islam,” to otherize Turkey through the Ottoman history. In fact, as the term president of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), it has been within the political sphere of Turkey to defend Jerusalem as a sacred relic.

Were it not for the Jerusalem crisis or an active Turkey in this regard, the UAE-Saudi Arabia-Bahrain line might have fudged Trump’s decision as a “secondary” issue and maintained cooperation with Israel against Iran. After all, Iran is a largely otherized player in the Arab world. At this point, Turkey, facing the opposition of even the U.S. about Jerusalem, has cracked down on the Gulf. Some of the Arab administrators, whose legitimacy has been broken, might carry out new verbal attacks on Erdoğan. However, they should not forget that, today, Erdoğan is the most valuable leader with his discourse in the eyes of the people of the Middle East.

This article was first published by Daily Sabah on December 27 , 2017.

Post Views: 191



You may also like
America’s Department of War
September 10, 2025
Fed’den Faiz İndirimi Sinyali 
August 23, 2025
California’dan Texas’a Karşı Seçim Hamlesi
August 23, 2025
  • Recent

    • The End of the American Century? Interdependence, Soft...
      June 9, 2025
    • Trump-Netanyahu Relationship Takes a Turn for the Worse
      May 30, 2025
    • Why Is Trump Bypassing Israel?
      May 30, 2025
    • Israel’s plan to involve the United States in the occupation...
      May 30, 2025
    • Private Roundtable With Turkish Deputy FM Nuh Yılmaz
      May 20, 2025
    • “Beyond Alliance: Rethinking US-Türkiye Relations...
      May 20, 2025
    • Trump's first 100 days...
      May 5, 2025
    • Will the rare earth elements deal bring peace?
      May 5, 2025
    • Is the U.S. withdrawing from Syria?
      April 25, 2025
    • The two-state solution debate and Türkiye’s strategic...
      April 16, 2025

  • Washington Gündemi

    • Aşırı Sağcı Aktivist Charlie Kirk Suikaste Uğradı
      September 12, 2025
    • Enflasyonun Gölgesinde Fed’in Faiz Kararı
      September 12, 2025
    • Rusya NATO’yu Test Ediyor
      September 12, 2025
    • İsrail’in Katar’a Saldırısı Amerika’yı Sorgulatıyor
      September 12, 2025
    • Sınır Dışı Etme Uygulamalarına Yargı Engeli 
      September 5, 2025
    • Mamdani Karşıtı Cephe Büyüyor
      September 5, 2025
    • “Gazze Rivierası” Planı Sızdırıldı  
      September 5, 2025
    • Trump’tan Çin’deki Liderler Zirvesine Tepki
      September 5, 2025
    • Suçla Mücadelede Söylemi: Güvenlik Kaygısı mı,...
      August 29, 2025
    • Amerikan Merkez Bankası’nın Bağımsızlığı...
      August 29, 2025



Stay Updated


© Copyright 2018-2022 SETA Foundation at Washington DC
Press enter/return to begin your search