Israeli annexation: How
will Jordan respond?
The planned annexation of the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank
presents a dilemma for the neighboring kingdom
By
in
Amman
Published date: 27 May
2020
If Israel really annexed the West
Bank valley in July, it would lead to a massive conflict with the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan.”
This was the unprecedented threat by Jordan’s King Abdullah II during an
interview earlier this month with German newspaper Der Spiegel.
As the unity government of Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu is gearing up to begin formally annexing parts of the occupied West Bank along the border with Jordan, the neighbouring kingdom is faced with the heavy question of how to respond to the
move.
There is no clear script for the Jordanian monarch,
as the kingdom finds itself having to balance its political and diplomatic positions
with more pragmatic concerns.
Options on
the table
In his interview with Der Spiegel, King Abdullah
stated that his country was considering “all options” in response to Israeli
annexation - a move deemed illegal under international law.
"I do not want to make any threats and create
an atmosphere of controversy, but we are considering all options... We agree
with many countries in Europe and with the international community that the law
of the fittest should not apply in the Middle East,” he said.
Following the 1948 war, Jordan ruled over the West
Bank until Israel occupied the Palestinian territory in 1967. Jordan remains
the custodian of Muslim and Christian holy sites in occupied East Jerusalem
until this day.
The announcement by the unity government of
Netanyahu and former rival Benny Gantz - who will serve as premier following
Netanyahu’s 18-month tenure in the role - that it was planning to annex the
Jordan Valley has become a serious dilemma for Jordan.
Encompassing roughly a third of the West Bank, the
Jordan Valley runs all along the border with Jordan. Should the territory be
annexed into Israel, this would mark a possible new threat to Jordan’s national
security.
“The king’s statements are clear:
the annexation of the Jordan Valley will cause a clash between Israel and
Jordan,” Jordanian Minister of Media Affairs Amjad Adaileh told the Middle East
Eye.
“We will not deviate from this issue and we will not forget the
Palestinian cause. Our position is clear and has been well articulated by King
Abdullah II.”
But what kind of action did the king have in mind? As Palestinian
Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has threatened to fully suspend its
adherence to the 1993 Oslo Accords, some politicians and military analysts are
suggesting that Jordan suspend its 1994 Wadi Araba peace treaty with Israel.
For Major General Mamoun Abu Nawwar, a retired Jordanian air force
pilot, “Jordan has no option except to abrogate the peace treaty with Israel if
it annexes the Jordan Valley and settlements.”
“Jordan is in a difficult position and annexation would be an undeclared
declaration of war on Jordan,” he told MEE. “I expect that it might be best if
Jordan ends the Wadi Araba treaty, and this will mean the cancellation of
security, military and economic agreements as well.
"This would be a big geopolitical shift for Jordan within the
balance of power in the region.”
Abu Nawwar rejected Israeli claims that annexing the Jordan Valley was
necessary to defend itself from outside aggression.
“Israel’s justification that it needs the Jordan Valley to host early
warning equipment is not accurate,” he said. “Iran and even the Houthi (rebels)
in Yemen are able to attack the heart of Israel with cruise missiles without
such warning sites stopping them.”
Meanwhile, Jordanian expert in Israeli affairs Ayman Hunaiti told MEE
that Jordan could take the legal route and go to the Israeli High Court. “This
could be part of a move by Jordan,” he said.
Delicate
diplomatic context
While some are hoping and advocating for a strong
Jordanian response, others believe Jordan will not escalate the situation
beyond its usual criticism and possible downgrading of diplomatic relations.
The constitutional court of Jordan ruled on 12 May
that international agreements are above national law, and therefore treaties
such as the one from 1994 cannot be abrogated by the Jordanian parliament.
Former deputy prime minister of
Jordan, Mamdouh al-Abadi, told MEE that he expected Amman to “summon the Jordanian
ambassador from Tel Aviv indefinitely and reduce diplomatic representation”.
Recalling a diplomatic incident in 2017 following the
killing of a Jordanian citizen by a guard in the Israeli embassy compound in
Amman, Abadi said: “The embassies in Amman and Tel Aviv left two
ambassadorships empty for months before Israel apologized and compensated the
families of the victims financially."
The former deputy premier added that Jordanian officials needed to
consider Jordan's interests - such as the country’s access to water, energy
sources, and financial aid - before making any moves.
Jordanian figures speaking to MEE broadly expressed their concern that
the annexation of the Jordan Valley would constitute a serious threat to
Jordan’s national security because it would spell an end to all attempts at
creating a viable Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital as part of
a two-state solution long touted by the international community.
Abadi said there were some fears that Jordan, which hosts over two
million Palestinian refugees would face a new influx of refugees - this time
with no hope of return.
Contacts on
annexation
Meanwhile, MEE has learned that Jordanian and
Palestinian authorities are in contact to coordinate their response to the
annexation process.
Should Jordan and the PA agree to stand shoulder to
shoulder, this could spell the simultaneous voiding of the Wadi Araba treaty
and the Oslo Accords, Abu Nawwar said, stating he expected that “any annexation
will result in dissolving the Palestinian Authority and the cancellation of the
Oslo peace deal”.
But Abadi told MEE he wasn’t certain Jordan would
go this far.
“A realistic look at the Arab world doesn’t bode
well for making Israel an enemy, nor is now the right time to clash with the
United States,” he said.
“The region is on fire, there is no Arab support
and the economy is in tatters. This means that Jordan can’t do more than
protest Israel’s moves and lead an international campaign against them.”
International
response
King Abdullah’s words have certainly caught the
attention of the US administration of President Donald Trump, a staunch
supporter of Israel.
“We understand that the king expressed his concern
and it is for this reason that we consider it important to return to the vision
of President Trump for peace,” US State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus
said during a press conference on Friday. “All parties should agree to sit at
the negotiating table and work out the execution of this peace plan.”
Trump’s Israeli-Palestinian plan - colloquially
known as the “deal
of the century” - has
been categorically rejected by the Palestinian leadership and widely panned for
adopting most demands of Israel’s right-wing government while
offering disjointed islands of territory for a prospective Palestinian
state with no sovereignty over its borders and airspace.
Hunaiti, the Israeli affairs
expert pointed out that the Israeli government’s latest move was met with US support.
“The US has given the green light for the annexation of the Jordan
Valley in exchange for a deal that Netanyahu and Pompeo agreed to - namely that
Israel stops its cooperation with China on
technological issues so that US military secrets are not leaked to China by
Israel,” he said.
Meanwhile, former foreign minister and Jordan’s first ambassador to
Israel, Marwan Muasher, said the Hashemite kingdom could not readily count on
the support of other Arab states should it take action in response to
annexation.
“There is a gap between the positions of different Gulf states when it
comes to annexation, which will kill the two-state solution,” said Muasher.
“The Arab reaction is disappointing, as there is a cooperation between Israel and
some Arab states on the Iranian issue. But despite the official opposition we
hear from Arab countries, there is no evidence of any serious movement by
states or even by the Arab League to confront the Israeli plans to annex the
[Jordan] Valley.”
Muasher argued for Jordan to take the battle onto the diplomatic stage.
“Jordan can lead diplomatic efforts on different Arab and European
fronts and within America’s decision-making corridors. In Congress and even
within the Trump administration, Jordan has friends who can be approached and
made to understand how devastating annexation will be to the peace process.”
Whatever the outcome, the former ambassador said, Jordan cannot stand
idly by.
“The official Jordanian position can’t be to act as a bystander and take
cosmetic actions. There has to be a strong movement led by Jordan.”
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