Skip to main content

How to Oppose Annexation Without Actually Opposing It: The Trump Doctrine of Elegant Hypocrisy

 


The Art of Saying No While Handing Over the Keys: Trump’s De Facto Annexation Gift to Israel

Ah yes — the era of principled diplomacy.”
The Trump administration, that self-proclaimed guardian of “fairness” in the Middle East, will forever be remembered for its masterclass in political double-speak — a rare performance where the United States verbally opposed Israel’s annexation of the West Bank while physically laying down the red carpet for it.

It’s like saying, “Please, don’t steal the car,” while quietly tossing over the keys, disabling the alarm, and complimenting the thief’s driving skills.




The Great Paradox — or Just the Great Performance?

Let’s call it what it was: a paradox of diplomacy, or perhaps more accurately, a farce performed for global consumption.

In words, the Trump administration urged restraint — telling Netanyahu that annexation should be “coordinated,” “negotiated,” and “timed wisely.”
In reality, it was busy dismantling every legal and diplomatic barrier that stood in Israel’s way.

It’s like pretending to oppose arson while supplying the gasoline, the match, and a round of applause.


The ‘Deal of the Century’ — A Blueprint for Control

The so-called Deal of the Century was marketed as peace.
What it really was, was a meticulously drawn blueprint for permanent subjugation — a map that gave Israel a legal halo for swallowing 30% of the West Bank. All that “conditional” annexation talk? Just window dressing for a process that was already underway, brick by brick, checkpoint by checkpoint.

While Washington posed for photo-ops under banners of “peace,” Palestinians watched bulldozers and settlers carve their future into fragments — a state in name, but a prison in practice.




The Greatest Hits of De Facto Annexation

To grasp the scale of hypocrisy, let’s revisit the Top Five U.S. Moves That Weren’t Annexation (But Were):

  1. Recognizing the Golan Heights (2019):
    Because nothing screams “rule of law” like endorsing territorial conquest.

  2. Moving the Embassy to Jerusalem (2018):
    A gift-wrapped recognition of Israel’s claim over the whole city — a symbolic middle finger to Palestinian sovereignty.

  3. Declaring Settlements Legal (2019):
    Pompeo’s cheerful declaration that settlements were “not inconsistent with international law” — rewriting decades of U.S. policy with the precision of a bulldozer.

  4. Defunding the Palestinians:
    UNRWA slashed. Palestinian Authority starved. The logic? Starve the institutions, then blame them for being “too weak to govern.”

  5. Burying the Two-State Solution:
    A political obituary disguised as a peace plan. What remained was not a “solution,” but an apartheid management system with nicer graphics.




Reality Check: Annexation Without the Ceremony

By the time Netanyahu toyed with formally announcing annexation, there was almost nothing left to declare.
The walls were up, the roads divided, the maps rewritten, and the U.S. had already signed the permission slip.

De facto annexation had become so routine that even calling it “controversial” felt outdated — like debating the ethics of a crime scene long after the evidence was buried.

Meanwhile, Trump’s envoys proudly called it a “win-win.” For whom, exactly?
For the settlers with new roads, armed protection, and legal immunity — certainly.

For the Palestinians penned behind barriers, stripped of land, water, and movement — not so much.




Two Laws, One Land, and Zero Justice

Israel’s control of the West Bank operates like a manual on modern apartheid.
Settlers enjoy civilian law — highways, infrastructure, and tax breaks.
Palestinians live under military law — curfews, raids, and checkpoints.
It’s a system so starkly unequal that even South African veterans of apartheid have called it by its rightful name

And through it all, the U.S. played the role of the “concerned friend” — the one who tells you they’re against violence while selling the ammunition wholesale.


The Legacy of a Contradiction

Jack Khoury was right to call it a paradox, but perhaps that’s too polite a word.
This was not a contradiction; it was a performance of virtue to mask the mechanics of domination.

Trump didn’t need to sign an annexation decree.
He merely changed the weatherso that occupation no longer looked like occupation, but “security”; dispossession no longer sounded like injustice, but “peacekeeping.”

By the time the world blinked, annexation wasn’t a plan — it was a lived reality.


And So, the Curtain Closes

The Trump era will be remembered not for its honesty, but for its eloquent deceit.
It taught the world that you can destroy a people’s hope — legally, strategically, and photographically — while still calling it diplomacy.



The annexation that wasn’t — was.
The peace that was promised — wasn’t.
And the “deal of the century” turned out to be a century-long theft, finalized with a handshake and a smirk.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Ceasefire of Exhaustion: When Empires Collapse from Within

  By Malik Mukhtar — ainnbeen.blogspot.com Two years after Gaza was first set on fire , the war that began with biblical vengeance has stumbled to an exhausted ceasefire . On October 9, 2025 , Israel and Hamas — after endless carnage, famine, and rubble — have signed the first phase of a ceasefire agreement mediated in Sharm el-Sheikh . Trump called it a “ historic peace plan. ” History may call it a truce of attrition — a war that collapsed under the weight of its own hubris. What the Ceasefire Says — and What It Doesn’t Under the agreement, Israeli forces are to pull back to a designated “yellow line” within 24 hours of cabinet ratification. Hamas, in turn, will release all remaining hostages — alive or dead — within 72 hours after the withdrawal. Israel will free about 2,000 Palestinian prisoners, though it made sure to exclude political figures like Marwan Barghouti , whose freedom would remind the world that Palestine still breathes. Humanitarian convoys — food,...

“They Came Home Broken":The Brutal Truth Behind the October 2025 Palestinian Releases

  They walked free —yet came home with broken bodies , shattered spirits , and scars that cannot be erased. On October 13, 2025, nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees were released from Israeli custody in return for hostages freed by Hamas. Many rejoiced; families wept with relief. But behind those scenes, a darker story surfaced—one of systemic abuse, medical neglect, and a betrayal of human dignity. The Faces Behind the Numbers Among those finally returned was Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya , a beloved hospital doctor in Gaza, whose ordeal reveals the brutality that many are still too afraid to speak about. He arrived having lost more than 20 kg in just two months , with fractured ribs from interrogation , a worsening heart condition denied proper medical attention , and the scars of solitary confinement and torture. He is not alone. In the landmark “ Welcome to Hell ” report, 55 formerly held Palestinians shared chilling testimonies : starvation diets, savage beatings, r...

A Masterclass in Crime-Scene Management: Netanyahu’s Gaza Strategy

Let’s all take a moment to appreciate the sheer, unadulterated genius of Benjamin Netanyahu . In an era of bumbling, incompetent statesmanship , he is giving the world a masterclass in forensic foresight . His strategy in Gaza isn’t just about security ; it’s a brilliant, pre-emptive legal defense played out on the rubble of a civilization. We must, of course, understand the predicament . When your military is accused of potential war crimes—the kind that involve leveling entire city blocks, turning hospitals into mausoleums, and creating a generation of orphans—the number one priority isn’t a ceasefire or introspection. No, no. It’s custody of the crime scene. And what a crime scene it is ! Gaza is a sprawling , open-air archive of potential indictments. It’s littered with inconvenient evidence: the corpses under the rubble , the shrapnel-ridden schools , the mass graves . It’s a prosecutor’s dream and a war criminal’s nightmare . So, what’s a nation committed to its " purity ...

The World as Gaza: Necropolitics and the Calculus of Survival

  “ The ultimate expression of sovereignty resides in the power and the capacity to dictate who may live and who must die.” — Achille Mbembe, “Necropolitics” There are philosophies that dissect history, and there are philosophies that bleed through it. Achille Mbembe’s Necropolitics belongs to the latter — it is not an academic exercise, but a diagnosis of the world’s moral decay. In his words, modern sovereignty is no longer about governing life — it is about managing death . It decides who is allowed to breathe, who must suffocate, and who will exist in the space between. Nowhere is this calculus of death more visible, more technologically refined, and more ethically bankrupt than in Palestine . The siege of Gaza has transformed necropolitics from theory into geography — a place where the architecture of control and the arithmetic of survival intersect. The Right to Kill, the Duty to Let Die In Necropolitics , Mbembe extends Foucault’s biopower — the power to “...

The Orphans of Occupation: Israel’s Forgotten Militias After the Ceasefire

By Malik Mukhtar — ainnbeen.blogspot.com Two years of blood and rubble later , Israel’s war on Gaza has ended not with victory parades but with an exhausted exhale — and a fresh moral hangover. Among the wreckage, a strange question lingers like smoke after a fire: What happens to Israel’s “friends” inside Gaza — those Popular Forces , those hastily armed “ Anti-Terror” auxiliaries , those who bet their lives on serving the occupier’s script? The Frankenstein Files In the ruins of Rafah and Khan Younis, Israel’s internal intelligence service, the Shin Bet , built a small army of convenience — men with grudges, ambition, or desperation . They were told they were the future of Gaza : the new “anti-Hamas,” the “security partners,” the “civil order.” For months, they helped identify targets, pass intelligence, and even guard IDF-controlled zones. Some were given money, others weapons. A few were promised “ protection ” — a promise now as worthless as the rubble beneath their fee...