BIG SH()TS 「Ⅳ当 1 USA The Other Red Phone Washington, D. C. ー President DonaId Trump speaks on the phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin for an hour as some OfhiS advisers look on in the OvaI Office on January 28. From left are Chiefof StaffReince Priebus, Vice President Mike Pence,White House ChiefStrategist Steve Bannon, Press Secretary Sean Spicer and National S ecurity Advi se r Mi- ch ael Flynn. Trump and Putin vowed tO lmprove relations between the tWO countries and talked about fighting te rror- ism and expanding economic ties, but neither mentioned the possible lifting of U. S. sanctions against Russia, T / 肥 N ビル YO T われお reported. DREW ANGERER
P A G E 0 N E / G A M B I A ー ONE DICTATOR DOWN After 22 years, Gambia finally has a new leader. Why were SO many voters thanking a couple of guys D. C. ? JEFFREY SMITH knew he wouldn't get much sleep on December 1. The American human rights advocate sat up all night in front 0f his computer in Washington, D. C. , with his dog Theo, watching as votes in the Gambian election trickled in. More than 4 , 000 miles away, in the West African country, volunteers in the capital city, Banjul, were emailing him results.Jammeh, Gambia S eccentnc, autocratic president Of 22 years, was facing an unexpectedly strong chal- lenge from Adama Barrow, 51 , a mild-mannered real-estate agent. Sometime around 5 a. m. the next day, it became clear that Barrow was going t0 pull 0 伊 an astonishing W1n, ending decades Of state- sponsored intimidation and human rights abuses that many Gambians had been fighting against for years. When all the votes were counted, Bar- row had secured 43.3 percent of the total, com- pared with Jammeh's 39.6 percent share. Barrow celebrated his win. But it was also a triumph for Smith. Nine months earlier, he had helped launch Vanguard Africa, a D. C. - based nonprofit organization that supports pro- democracy politicians in Africa. Co-founded in April 2016 by し S. Democratic Party strategist BY KRISTA MAHR 当 @kristamahr NEWSWEEK 20 02 / 10 / 2017
ーの 0 もⅳ 5 - HEAR ltalian director Daniele Abbad0 ( わ elo ル ) brings a new production ofVerdi dizzymg, melodramatic opera 〃胼 4 知尾 tO the Staatsoper, Vienna, with Roberto Alagna as the doomed Manrico. STAY T, ん Dra ルⅲ丑ィー 48 イ roo 〃が 4 と 4 川右 g リイ市 c 知 co 〃川 20m ワ ra ルⅲ g ー叩 0 ⅲ 4 ″ 0 〃な右 ~ 4 ′な , ル i み 0 を 4 ′加ァ催ⅲ ev ワ roo 川 . ・ 03 辷コ S38 っ 19d 38 コト N3ttOV 尋】。 N00N01 一 0d3 」あ S3flN コ 30 & ・ VS13 一 8 3 工 dO ト S & 工 0 ・ I 6 3 On the rare occaS1011S that the French fashion set dO eat, they go tO Ferdi's. Now a London outpost ofthe tiny parisian brassene has opened in Mayfair—just in time for Fashion Week. SEE Find seventh heaven at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D ℃” as the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater stages seven performances for the centenary ofPresident Kennedy's birth. EAT 4 VISIT Finally, a party to which you re invited. The Berlin lnternational Film Festival hosts the world premiere 0fSally potter's The R り , with Cillian Murphy and Kristin Scott Thomas ( 励の . 2 BUY From tick-tock to drip-drop: The German designer Patrick Palcic has launched this copper wall clock, which releases puffs ofa different fragrance t0 mark the turning ofeach hour. ferd ・ i NEWSWEEK 64 02 / 10 / 2017
Newsweek F E B R UAR Y 10 , 2 017 / V0 L . 16 8 / N 0 . 0 5 ー N T E R N AT ー 0 N A L 十 BALLROOM BLITZ: DonaId and MeIania Trump dance at the Freedom BaII on 」 anuary 20 in Wash- ington, D. C. 16 「 a 可 Location, Location, Location 20 Gambia One Dictator Down N E W W 〇 R L D Brains Brains From Beyond the Grave 46 Trump AccidentaIIy Great Again 49 EPA Eco-Chamber Of Horrors 50 Species Trump vs. Polar Bears 44 D E P A R T M E N T S F E A T U R E S D 〇 W N T ー M E 引 G S H 〇 T S 26 WeIcome, Comrade As President Donald Trump turns America inward, is China's Xi Jinping about tO become a global statesman? 切ム“ / 〃ね〃 The Queens Of TrumpIandia 54 Arctic Blood and Tundra StyIe A Special Case 61 iPhones Smashing Times Cinema That Loving Feeling 64 To-Do List YourWeek Made Better Munster, lndiana Vetting Extremism Santa 0 a , ChiIe Heat Stroke Tijuana, Mexico lfYouBi 旧 t.. Washington, D. C. The Other Red Phone 4 ・ 8 1 亠 58 34 Donald Trump's cotllt is an end-times Came10t that tells you more than you might want tO know about the role ofwomen in his world. 切ルか“おれ市なん 62 —PA G EO N — 12 Media Why the Media Keeps LOSing tO DonaldTrump Prisons You Have the Right to Remain Beaten A11397 工 0S136 NlA3Y COVER CREDIT: ILLUSTRATION BY COSTIS PAPATHEODOROU Newsweek 0SSN2052-1081 ). is published weekly except one week in 」 anuary, 」 u ツ , August and October. Newsweek (EMEA) is published by Newsweek Ltd (part Ofthe 旧 T Media Group Ltd), 25 Canada Square, Canary Wharf, London E14 5LQ, UK. Printed by Quad/Graphics Europe Sp z 0.0. , Wyszkow, P01and For Article Reprints, Permissions and Licensing www.旧Treprints.com/Newsweek FOR MORE HEAD 凵 NES, GO TO NEWSWEEK.COM 15 1 N E W 5 W E E K 0 2 / 10 / 2 017
をミ蠱をを第を ト当引 第十ツ第第三 を第第 - 1 0 十 ONE-STATE QUANDARY: NO one America's only democratic ally in the Middle team assess the possibilities for his Middle East has figured out hOW 「 a 可 could absorb East ifit didn't 0 飛 r them full rights. peace effort, advocates for relocating the embassy the West Bank t0 Jerusalem haven't given up. R0bert Sat10ff, That conundrum hasn't stopped Netanyahu and still remain a 」 ewish majority executive director Of the pro-lsrael Washington from accelerating settlement activity now that country as well as lnstitute for Near East P01icy, recentlypublished a Trump is in 0 伍 ce. Within days of his inaugura- a democracy. detailed plan that he claims will enable the move tion, lsrael approved more than 3 , 000 new hous- t0 go forward without sparking protests 仕 om Pal- ing units in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. ln the coming weeks, the lsraeli parliament is estinians. The plan proposes designating a West Jerusalem address for the temporary embassy expected t0 pass bills that would legalize more while the new embassy is constructed. MOSt than 100 illegal outposts built on private Pales- tinian land in the West Bank and annex Ma'aIe important, SatlOff cautions , the Trump adminis- tration should stress the move does not prejudge Adumim, a sprawling settlement city 0f40 , 000 Palestinian claims tO East Jerusalem, which will between Jerusalem and the Dead Sea. The move, be resolved in negotiations. a maJOr sticking point in past peace talks, would Miller, the former State Department adviser, cut the West Bank nearly in half. thinks the plan is a fantasy. NO matter how you Ofcourse, none ofthis matters ifTrump s idea tryto qualify it, ” he says, "bymoving the embassy Of a peace process iS tO ignore the Palestinians t0 Jerusalem, we will have basically agreed that and pursue agreements between lsrael and its united Jerusalem is the eternal capital Of lsrael, new security partners in the Gulf. That certainly opening the door for the lsraelis tO expand their appears tO be the view among some Republicans. presence there without any pushback from the Duncan Hunter of CaIifornia, a member of the United States. House Armed Services Committee, says Trump s For Friedman, Trump s amb assadorial nomi- policy is tO go with whatever Netanyahu sees as nee, it apparently makes no difference whether the best course for the lsraelis. Trump moves the embassy now or later. He That view p artially explains Trump s postpone- already has an apartment in Jerusalem, where he ment of the embassy move, along with his own plans tO live and work until a new embassy nses concerns about an eruption Of anti-American that open field. ロ violence. But as Trump and his national se cunty A11397d」V、VNV 工 VY 工 VN3bN NEWSWEEK 19 02 / 10 / 2017
D 0 W N T I M E / C I N E M A SCREENING ROOM THAT LOVING FEELING Jeff Nichols's new 升 lm tackles racism from the inside out "DON'T SPOIL the ending!" people say, as ifthere the hardness ofhis features seeming tO take on a was, in most movies, anything tO spoil. HOlly- crueler cast. You re as nervous as She iS. Finally: "Good," he says, with a small nod and a smile. wood long ago forgot the art 0f wrapping up its Relieffloods her features. we're hooked. films, choosing mostly to blow them up instead. Fireballs, cratering planets, inter-dimensional The story is based on the case 0f mchard and vortexes guarded by alien overlords with ornate MiIdred Loving, a mixed-race couple from Vir- ginia whose attempts tO stay married tOOk them headpieces and English accents—the frenzied final reels all blur into one. Beginnings are fre- all the way t0 the Supreme Court and, by 1967 , quently more maginative. S リ〃右 BO どリ 4 , forced a change in the law prohibiting interra- with its corpse in a swlmming pool. T んビ比Ⅳ辺 cial marnage. Aha, you think. You know where Be B あ 0 with its spewmg 0 ⅱ strike. Just about this is headed—impassioned pleas t0 the 】 u 事 any movie directed by Steven Spielberg, whose righteous anger, tear-Jerking closing arguments. openings unfurl like drops 0fink in water. You would, however, be reckoning without Nich- The beginning of もⅲ g , the fifth film from OI an Arkansas native whose preuous films writer-director Jeff Nich01s, is a beauty. A white ( S ん 0 リ〃 S 知ぉ , ル S 厖ら Mud and M 襯 g Sp ど巨 4 り Often feature occult events set in an man 00d Edgerton) and a black woman (Ruth Negga) are sitting on a porch in what 100kS t0 be everyday, Rust Belt landscape 0f pickup trucks, rural America; judging from the man's plaid shirt trailer homes and lonely gas stations—Stephen and his blond buzz cut, you'd say some tlme in King by way 0fRaymond Carver. the 1950S. l'm pregnant, says the woman, her After the news 0f her pregnancy, the Lovings big, doll-like eyes searching the man's face for marry in Washington, D. C. , then return tO Vir- clues tO his reaction. For a while, he says nothing, ginia. They are in bed one night when the local sheriff (Martin Csokas) wake s them up and throws them in pnson. "AII we NICHOLS FOCUSES NO gotta dO is ke ep tO our- ON THE LEGAL FIGHT, BUT ON selves for a while and this will blow ove r, says Rich- THE LOVINGS THEMS LVES, ard, after a local lawyer THE HUMDRUM R HMS helps secure their release on the condition that they OF THEIR REI. ATIONS IP. BY qult the state. They move TOM SHONE to D. C. , but as Mildred 当 @Tom Shone NEWSWEEK 62 0 2 / 10 / 2 017
十 PROTEST FAIL: Efforts to block the proposed Dakota Access pipeline came tO naught as Trump signed an executive 0 「 de 「 tO revive it. ECO-CHAMBER 0 ド HORRORS THE TRUMP TRANSITION TEAM TRIES TO CLEARTHE FOG ABOUT CLAIMS THE EPA'S BEING GUTTED tO assess itS many avenues Of after the election. 'What I have UNTIL LASTmonth, the Envi- commumcation. Many ofthese ronmental ProtectionAgency heard is that this[memol was outlets can still be accessed, but not his final piece ofwork, ” says communicatedwiththe public through nine blogs, three discus- newcontent is notbemgposted. Ericksen. "That one was created "We're tryingto get a handle on very early ⅲ the process and was sionforums, 34Faceb00kpages, what's commg out," he says. replacedbyseveral otherpro- 37 Twitterhandles, れ vo Medium He insists that individual posed ideas. ' However, Ericksen accounts, aYouTube channel, a Pinterestpage, numerouswid- press offerswillbe givenper- says he has not seen the leaked mission tO respond tO media 1 emo or any Other iteratlons. gets, awiki site, and lnstagram, FIickr and Storify accounts. inquiries directly but could not EbeIIis no longer on the transi- Thatcame to ahaltwiththe provide a timeline beyond 'as tion team. Ericksen could not arrivalofDonald Trump. Reports soon as we possiblycan. He says saywhetherEbell's suggestions, which included liftingregula- saidEPAclimatewebpageswere the transitlon team IS meetmg beingshutdown, researchfunds tions on greenhouse gases and With regional communication water contamination, would be werebeing slashedandpress staffas a next step. Ericksen could not say what adopted. 'AII ofthese things are omcers had been silenced. the fundingpriorities willbe conversations for a later day. A key member ofthe Trump when the new EPA administrator Asked about contentions transiuon team says that the iS confirmed. Trump's nommee that the Trump administration reports were exaggerated and has ⅱ厄 interest ⅲ protecting is SCOtt Pruitt, the attorney gen- that the ensuing alarm on eralofOklahoma who has initi- the envrronment, Ericksen says social media and elsewhere iS Trump's strategies may simply ated or j Oined some れ VO dozen unwarranted. "There is nothmg be different from the Obama abnormal or out Ofthe ordinary sults againstthe EPA. Pruitthas had a confirmation heanng, but administration's. happening atthe EPAright now, at press time the Senate had not Ericksen iS a state senator says Doug Ericksen, whO is yet voted t0 confirm him fromWashingtonwith amaster's advising the new EPA adminis- Late lastmonth, the news site degree ⅲ environmental policy trator and leading communi- Axi0S reported that the Trump 仕 om Western Washington Un1- cations for the transition team. administration was going tO versity, and he iS as uncertain lt's true that all social media radicallyreshape the EPA. That abouthis future as he is about accounts have been suspended and individual press omcers news purportedly came from a the EPA's. l've got one sult, one leaked memowrittenbyMyron tuxedo, and I have t0 go shop- cannot respond tO inqurries, ping,' he says. 町 haven't decided he says. But he te Ⅱ s Ⅳ硼 , 引 EbeII, who'd been appointed to the EPA transition team shO how much I like this town yet. " ロ thatthe agencyis simplytrying S 工 31n3d 、 d31S3 > IÅS ÅVH831 BY 」 ESSICA WAPNER 当@jessicawapner NEWSWEEK 49 02 / 10 / 2017
Joe Trippi and Christopher Harvin of public relations firm Sanitas lnternational, Vanguard's mission IS tO give Africa's political underdogs the same kind of public relations support often reserved for autocrats who can afford tO pay mternational firms to burnish their images ・ Here in D. C. , there are so many PR and lobbying firms that work for highly oppressive governments tO help them prOJect a positive lmage, despite massive human rights concerns, says Smith, 36 , wh0 has worked on Africa po ト icy for UNESCO, a し N. agency that promotes mternational peace and security; advocacy organization RObert F. Kennedy Human mghts; and し S. think tank Freedom House. Though Vanguard isprimarilyrunningonfundingfrom its IN A SPEECH IN DECE BER, TRUMP SAID HIS ADMINISTRATION WO LD "STOP TRYING TO BUI D NEW NATIONS IN FAR-OFF DS. ” founders for now, the group hopes tO raise money from sources like family foundations and corpo- rations, tO Offer pro-bono help tO democratic underdogs" across the continent. ln the run-up tO Gambia's election, Vanguard provided campalgn advice and public relations support tO candidates daring tO run against Jammeh, wh0 seized power in a 1994 coup and whose administration has been accused by rights groups 0f imprisoning and torturing political opponents, Journalists and LGBT people. Smith reached out tO international journalists tO pro- mote storles, circulated the candidates' names on social media and regularly spoke tO news out- lets about the Gambian election. AS Gambians celebrated Barrow s win in the stre ets 0f B anjul, thanks poure d in t0 Smith and Vanguard over Twitter. "Thank you so much Gambia's own Jeffrey smith. We were ignored by many but you stood up for us all the way, one Twitter user wrote. Smith tried tO redirect some of the praise back to Gambian voters, but the media attention put Vanguard in the spotlight. Some questioned Why he was even involved. Shouldn't we rather want to ask who exactly is @Smith JeffreyT and what is his agenda with our destiny, another user tweeted. That Twitter user's skepticism, though in the mmority, underlines the tricky nature Of Van- guard's work in promoting democracy from the Other side 0f the globe. But nongovernmental organiz ations like Vanguard could take on an even larger share Of this work under the new U. S. administration, which appears committed tO reducing America s engagement abroad. ln his inaugural address on January 20 , President DonaId Trump promised t0 put America first. This could include deprioritizing Washington's long-standing practice Of promoting democracy in Other countries. ln a speech in pennsylvania ln December, Trump said his administration would stop trying t0 build new nations in far-offlands. " According t0 Steven Feldstein, former U. S. dep- uty assistant secretary Of state in the Bureau Of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor: "There's a lOt oftrepidation in the democracy community about what's commg next. But organizations in the し S. are likely tO con- tinue their work, he adds. Democracy-building groups that receive government funding, like the National Democratic lnstitute, have a long history 0f bipartisan support among し S. law- makers; Others are privately funded. Autocratic governments in Africa Often use money, graft, and restrlction Of information tO hOld ontO power, says Feldstein, which makes outside help essential for opposltion parties tO run viable campalgns. The type 0f work that Vanguard is dOing is absolutely critical as a way tO balance out a playing field tilted in favor ofincumbents. Many of these pro-democracy groups work in Africa, Where democratic gains have been made in recent decades but serious challenges remalll.• ln 2015 , leaders in Rwanda, Burundi and Congo sought tO extend their term limits, and last year, violence and corruption marred elections ln Uganda, Somalia and Gabon. ln Gambia, Barrow s upset turned the tiny 4 NEWSWEEK 22 02 / 10 / 2017
push tO strike pacts with Other nations. The same day that Trump consigned the TPP t0 the Oval Offce wastebasket, a Chinese initiative had some good news tO share. The multilateral Asian lnfrastructure lnvestment Bank, which was set up by Beijing in 2015 tO finance infrastructure proJects across Asia, had received applications from 25 new prospectlve members fror れ Africa, Europe and South America, t0 add t0 the 57 existing shareholders. The し S. had been hostile tO the bank, seeing it as a challenge to existing institutions, such as the World Bank, and had declined t0 join; it chastised others, including the し K. , for sigmng on. Jin Liqun, the b ank 's Chi- nese president, tOld the F ⅲ 4 れ襯 , "China needs t0 d0 something that can help it be recog- nized as a responsible leader. signs 0f China's growing role as a champion of globalization kept coming. The following day, on January 24 , the prime minister 0f Malay- sia urged a speedy conclusion tO the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), China s own Pacific trade initiative involving 16 countrie s in the Asia-Pacific , which China promse S Will bOOSt e conomic integration in the region. TWO days later, the deputy prime mmis- ter ofThailand voiced a similar sense ofurgency. The prospective member countnes, which repre- sent 29 percent 0f global trade, are scheduled t0 meet in February in Japan tO conclude the pact. The battle between China and the U. S. for leadership in the Asia-Pacific re gion , the world's most dynamic of area econom1C growth, shifted remark- ably in just those few days, leaving America s regional allie s—nota- bly Japan, Australia and S outh Kore a—uncertain about what the changing balance 0f power and influence Will mean for their own futures. Until now, along with Taiwan and Vietnam, these three key U. S. allies have enjoyed the secu- rity guarante e Of Amer- 1Ca S military presence and the political reassur- ance 0f Obama's early decision to focus し S. foreign and trade pol- icy on the region. Along with that came the prosp ect 0f the world's THREE DAYS BEFORE Donald Trump t00k the oath 0f 0ffce and became the 45th president 0f the United States, Chinese Pres- ident Xi Jinping stOOd on the mmn stage at the World Economic Forum s annual meeting in the Swiss mountain resort Of Davos and alluded tO Charles Dickens. lt was, Xi told the gathering of the global business and policy elite,"the best Of times and the worst Of times. ” The Chinese president then delivered an uncompromislng defense ofglobalization, despite acknowledging its flaws. lt had, he said,"powered global growth and facilitated movement 0f goods and capital, advance S in SC1ence, technology and CiViliz ation, and interactions among people. Five days later, Trump made it as clear as possible that he did not share xi's enthusi- asm for international free trade deals. On Jan- uary 23 , the new president signed an order tO withdraw from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the hard-won trade deal negotiated under President Barack Obama. The TPP would have created a trade pact with 12 countries, including Japan, Peru and Vietnam, that together would have represented 40 percent 0f the g10bal economy. The deal deliberately excluded China, and many in Washington saw it as a way ofcontaining Chi- na S regional dominance. ln Beijing, Xi will likely have reacted t0 Trump s move tO withdraw from the TPP with mixed feelings. On the one hand, the decision delivered a significant blow to the era 0f free trade; but Xi would no doubt have celebrated the demise 0f a deal designed in part to hem in Chi- na s vast engine oftrade. As the U. S. was backing away from a mapr international agreement, China continued its ÅI ト 3979d38W001 28 N E W 5 W E E K 0 2 / 10 / 2 017
を it will be hard to convince Arab leaders to exclude the pale stinlans entirely from his vision Of pe ace. lt's not the first thing on their mind," says Steven C00k, an Arabist at the Council on Foreign Rela- tions. But the palestinian issue is still emotive and symbolic. lt will be very diffcult for the Arab state s tO take the next step Of sitting down and recognizing lsrael without addre ssing it. Either way, many analysts applauded Trump s pullback from the embassy move. They say he'll need t0 use all his negotiating skills if he hopes tO broker a regional peace accord—something Trump has called the "ultimate deal. " Many vet- eran Middle East hands suggest Trump might reconsider his intention tO appoint his trusted son-in-law, Jared Kushner, 32 , an Orthodox Jewish real estate developer with no diplomatic experience, as his Middle East envoy. If you can't produce peace in the Middle East, nobody can, ' he tOld Kushner at a dinner Of top cam- paign donors at Washington's Union station the night before his inauguration. Yet Kushner may have already compromised his ability tO be seen as an honest broker. The lsraeli daily H44 last year dug up tax records showing his family foundation, which he and his siblings direct with their parents, has donated tens of thousands 0f dollars to Jewish settle- ment organizations in the West Bank. Palestin- ians regard the settlements, home tO roughly 630 , 000 Jews, as lsrael's way Of preventing establishment oftheir independent state. If anyone was foolish enough to believe that a Trump administration might succeed in nego- tiating a peace agreement between lsrael and the Palestinians, this is further evidence oftheir delusions,' Diana Buttu, a Palestinian political analyst and former adviser t0 Abbas, told the Associated Press. Trump also will need to brush up on interna- tionallaw, which bans a conquering power from transferring parts Ofits population intO occupied territory. Trump's advisers on lsraeli affairs say he doesn t consider the settlements to be illegal or obstacles tO peace. Enabling his views is the Republican party's platform, which rejects "the false notion" that lsrael is an occupymg power. lsrael, which seized the West Bank and EastJeru- P A G E 0 N E / I S R A E L N E W S W E E K salem from Jordan in 1967 , argues thatJordan's soverelgnty over the territory wasn t mternation- ally recognized at the time. Trump appeared to deliberately flout diplo- matlC conventlon in December When he nom ト nated David Friedman, a New York bankruptcy lawyer with far-right political views, as his ambas- sador tO lsrael. ln his upcoming confirmation heanng, senators almost certainly W111 question Friedman about his strong opposition tO a two - state solution tO the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is the long-standing し S. position. "There has never been a two-state solution, only a two-state narrative, ” Friedman wrote a column for Arutz 7 , a right-leaning lsraeli news site. Arguing that Palestinians would have much better lives if they accepted lsraeli rule, he added, "Much has changed over the decades smce the two-state narrative began.... pales- tinians can witness—through the internet and first-hand experience—the advantages of inte- gration intO lsraeli society. Advocatmg such a move would be a maJor break in American policy. Yet some say Fried- man s views are more attuned tO the reality on the "YO U'D HAVE S UNNI AND SHIA RADICALS BOTH WAGING HOLY AR AGAINST THE ISRAELI AND THE UNITED STA ES. ” ground in both lsrael and the West B ank. As the stalemate between the tWO sides drags on, more lsraelis and Palestinians are beginning tO discuss amongst themselves a one-state solution in which lsrael absorbs the West Bank and its Palestinian population, says Kurt V01ker, a former ambassa- dor ⅲ the George 、Ä.7. Bush administration. "The settlements and the intertwining of societies have gone t00 far, and there isn t any way tO separate them anymore," he tells News- ルた . "You can't draw the boundary, you can t realistically evacuate that many Jewish settlers, and you can't trust the Palestinians on security. SO it's going t0 have t0 be lsrael in charge ofthe whOle territory on security. The problem, Middle East analysts say, is that no one has figured out yet how lsrael could remain a Jewish state if it were tO give all those Palestinians the vote, or hOW lsrael could remaln 18 02 / 10 / 2017