The Jerusalem embassy, 5 years later
When America stands with its friends, we put the bullies in their place
Even in 2017, it was not a foregone conclusion that America would fulfill its decades-old promise. Many of my colleagues in the Trump administration were strongly opposed to the idea. They warned that our allies would turn against us, Americans would be killed and war in the Middle East would quickly ignite.
Some of us knew better. Twenty-two years of the status quo hadn't curbed Palestinian terrorism or brought the two sides closer to a peace agreement. Our unwillingness to act only made America look weak. A country that can't fulfill a simple decades-old promise to an ally is a country no one respects. Everyone walks all over it.
Moving our embassy was ultimately about standing up for ourselves. No one – not the UN, not our friends and certainly not our enemies – has the right to tell the United States where to put our embassy. After Donald Trump finally made the decision to implement the Act, I proudly vetoed a UN resolution criticizing the US for doing so. I was the lone veto out of the 15-member Security Council. It was the first US veto at the UN in nearly seven years.
In my speech following the veto, I explained, "Jerusalem has been the political, cultural and spiritual homeland of the Jewish people for thousands of years" and that America was acknowledging the obvious.
Just as importantly, I stood up to the critics, defended American sovereignty, and took the names of those who attacked us. As I warned, "The United States will remember this day in which it was singled out for attack in the General Assembly for the very act of exercising our right as a sovereign nation. … This vote will be remembered."
For too long, America acted like an international doormat. We worried more about upsetting enemies than defending friends. We looked the other way when evil regimes committed unspeakable crimes. We convinced ourselves that playing nice would make the worst countries in the world play nice too.
They did not. All we did was embarrass ourselves.
Five years later, the US embassy in Jerusalem is a proud symbol of American strength and the strength of the US-Israel relationship. It is also a reminder of how America can and must ignore the bullies and do what's right – not least because it puts the bullies in their place.
How things have changed. Under President Joe Biden, America has gone into retreat. From the surrender in Afghanistan to the failure to deter Russia from invading Ukraine to putting partisan politics ahead of allies like Israel, Biden is listening to the same foolish ideas – often from the same foolish people – that I heard over and over before we moved the embassy to Jerusalem. They say that weakness is really strength, that inaction is really leadership.
It wasn't then. It isn't now. More than ever before, the United States needs to send the message that our friends can trust us, our enemies should fear us and we'll do what's right no matter who stands in the way. That is the lesson of moving the US embassy to Jerusalem. It's a lesson we need to remember, and then remind the world of it.
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