John Kerry Issues Dire Warning On Israeli Settlements Ahead Of Pro-Settlement Donald Trump Entering Office | HuffPost Latest News - Action News
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Posted: 2016-12-28T20:54:55Z | Updated: 2016-12-28T21:51:07Z

WASHINGTON The best way to understand outgoing Secretary of State John Kerrys Wednesday speech on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is to recognize that if Hillary Clinton had won the election, he most likely never would have delivered such an address.

In the harshest criticism from a member of the U.S. government against its Israeli ally, Kerry spent more than an hour venting his frustration with continued Israeli settlement construction and laying out parameters for eventual peace. The settlements and the nearly 50-year-old occupation, he said, are creating a reality on the ground that precludes the possibility of a two-state solution. He stopped short of using the word apartheid, but warned that the one-state reality that is emerging will create a separate and unequal situation, invoking language from the Jim Crow era.

The settler agenda is defining the future in Israel, Kerry said. Their stated purpose is clear: They believe in one state, greater Israel, he continued, referring to aspirations by extreme conservatives to eventually annex occupied Palestinian territory.

Kerrys premise shouldnt be controversial. It has been U.S. policy for more than four decades that Israeli settlements pose an obstacle to peace with the Palestinians.

But what is peculiar about his remarks is their timing. With just three weeks left in office, Kerry wont accomplish anything concrete with his speech. Instead, his words were more likely related to Donald Trump s recent election.

Next month, the Obama administration hands over policymaking authority to a man who has encouraged Israel to build more settlements . The president-elect has also nominated David Friedman, a confidante who has donated to pro-settlement causes , to serve as his ambassador to Israel. In coordination with an Israeli government dominated by politicians who openly disavow the two-state solution, the Trump White House appears poised to reverse decades of bipartisan commitment to Palestinian statehood by greenlighting Israeli settlements.

After the speech, Kerry told MSNBCs Andrea Mitchell that Friedmans appointment didnt play a role in his decision to give the address. In his telling, the impetus for Wednesdays speech was a moral imperative. The U.S. cannot defend settlements and also be true to our own values or even the stated democratic values of Israel, Kerry said. Friends need to tell each other the hard truths, and friendships require mutual respect.

But its hard to believe that the outgoing diplomat, who dedicated a significant chunk of his tenure to failed two-state solution negotiations, didnt feel a need to distance himself from the reality of what is to come. Wednesdays speech was tantamount to a preemptive I-told-you-so, in the event that Trump reverses longstanding U.S. commitments to Palestinian statehood and opposition to Israeli settlements.

The Obama administration and Kerry had plenty of opportunities to make this kind of speech before today, and with time to see through the results of the tough talk. When peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinians collapsed in 2014, there was no airing of hard truths on this level. And as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu oversaw the construction of more settlements and cobbled together a coalition that openly rejects Palestinian statehood, the Obama administration limited itself to occasional restrained criticism of the government. Obama never tied the immense amount of U.S. military aid to a settlement freeze. The only punishment imposed by the Obama administration for Israeli construction in the West Bank was last weeks decision to abstain from voting on a non-binding U.N. resolution that criticized the settlements.

For the past several years, the Obama administration could rationalize this approach by assuming that Clinton, Kerrys predecessor, shared their belief in the need for a two-state solution and could be trusted to pick up where the current government left off. With that expectation upended, the administration appears desperate to lay down a marker.

There is a history of outgoing administrations carving out final positions on critical but unsettled issues before leaving office. This could be Kerrys effort to make clear the Obama administrations stance on the conflict and even offer a way forward for the next administration. But if Trump oversees a policy reversal that yields disastrous results, the Obama administration will be on record warning against it.