Submit your comments on this article |
Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
So why has Obama been hammering Israel for so long? |
2015-05-19 |
![]() He told the interviewer: "I've said to the Israelis you cannot remain a state that is both a democracy and Jewish if you continue to have this problem unresolved. And with respect to the Palestinians, I've said that you cannot expect to have a state of your own and the full dignity and respect that is inherent for all human beings if you also don't recognize Israel, because Israel is not going anywhere." Asked whether there would be a summit with Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Obama said there was a lack of trust that made that leap impossible. As for a possible summit between the Israeli and Palestinian leaders, Obama said: "Well, you never say never. So we'll see how it unfolds. But the U.S.'s commitment to both a secure Israel and a sovereign Palestinian state, that remains our policy." Good to know. It is, by the way, a remarkable confession that the peace process obsession was a colossal waste of time and that you can't blame Israel, or at least not Israel alone, for the failure to obtain peace. Elliott Abrams, former deputy national security adviser in the George W. Bush administration, served when Israeli-U.S. relations were extremely warm and Israel agreed to voluntarily leave Gaza, take down some West Bank checkpoints and not expand settlements beyond the existing footprint. Reading the president's comments, Abrams tells me: "The President has now acknowledged both that PLO chairman Abbas is not able to move forward to peace and that there will be no peace until Palestinians are ready to recognize Israel." Obama nevertheless is not candid about his own role in creating enmity. "He says there's a lack of trust, but what he doesn't say is that there was plenty of trust in 2008 and his administration dissipated it with partisan, ideological attacks on Israel's government," Abrams says. "He is asking Palestinians to be realistic, but that's advice his own government has rejected in six years of hostility toward Israel's government." The interview was noteworthy on several other points. Asked about Sunni states' fear that the United States is letting Iran run amok, the president lamely responded that at the Gulf Summit "what I wanted to emphasize, because I think there's been concerns in the region about Iran's destabilizing activities, is that even if we get a deal on the nuclear issue we are still concerned with some of those activities by not only Iran and the Quds Force and the IRGC [Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps], but also proxies like Hezbollah." No wonder our allies are freaked out. What the heck does "still concerned" amount to? He does not even bother to expressly condemn Iran's actions. In addition, his response to the interviewer's incredulity about an Iran deal in which key terms will sunset is telling: Q On the deal with Iran, some say it's a political gamble to have this deal because 10 to 15 years is a short period. And if they're going to use this money from the sanction relief to better the life of the Iranian people, it's kind of a wishful strategy. How do you respond to that? Actually, the alternative is to make Iran give up its nuclear architecture so that after 10 years when the Iranians will no longer be "severely restricted in their activities around any kind of nuclear power," Iran won't have the infrastructure in place to build an industrial-sized nuclear weapons program. Finally, his denial about his own role in allowing the Syrian civil war to drag on is stunning, even for him. He insists, "If the United States simply sent in troops into Syria -- our military is very effective, and for a short period of time, we potentially could come down on the side of the opposition against [Syrian President Bashar al-]Assad. But in terms of governance, in terms of keeping the peace, in terms of working through some of the sectarian issues that have plagued that country as well as the region for such a long time, those would still be there." Well, now, that is true. But for years he did nothing to assist the Free Syrian Army and, of course, he backed down from his own red line. Obama had every opportunity to foreclose the potential for mass killing; he chose not to. One does not expect the president to confess his failures while in office, let alone to a foreign news outlet. But the degree to which he omits himself from events under his watch is, well, mind-blowing. Even more frightful is the degree to which he invests in the unsupportable notion that there will be a time Iran will not have a "severely restricted" nuclear program. |
Posted by:gorb |
#3 "If you’re asking why not provide a formal treaty [with the GCC,] the truth of the matter is, is that the treaty process is very cumbersome, requires congressional approval, and it’s not necessary in this situation in order for us to be able to accomplish the goals that we wanted to meet." At least he's consistent... |
Posted by: Pappy 2015-05-19 18:00 |
#2 He's not too keen on African nations who's predominate religion is fundamental Christianity either. However, in the great game of RISK, those are of more interest to the Chinese player rather than his buds who want the Middle East territory. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2015-05-19 17:03 |
#1 Uh, because Israel is filled with perfidious Juice and there is power and influence to be gained by allying with the various parties who are trying to destroy them? |
Posted by: SteveS 2015-05-19 16:25 |