Listen to all the naysayers denigrating the Trump administration’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and you will hear one recurring theme: The United states should serve as a “honest broker.” Yet, that is precisely what it has done.

An honest broker must deliver hard truths, and there are few truths more empirically established than the centrality of Jerusalem to the Jewish nation. That Jerusalem is the capital of the State of Israel is similarly unassailable, and no rational diplomat would conceive an alternate reality under any settlement of the conflict with the Palestinians.

King David established his monarchy in Jerusalem more than 3,000 years ago. Remnants of the two Jewish Temples — the Western Wall being only the most prominent — provide tangible and irrefutable evidence of the Jewish kingdom that continued to thrive in Jerusalem until its destruction by the Roman empire in 70 CE.

Rome left Jerusalem in ruins, minting coins — “Judea Capta” — to bear witness to the Judean monarchy that it overran. The Arch of Titus in Rome (ironically, a UNESCO heritage site) memorializes to this day the spoils carried from the Jewish kingdom that UNESCO supporters now perniciously deny.

In the centuries that followed, none of the succeeding occupying forces...read more at Baltimore Sun