Breaking
Bibi
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
"I have to admire the residents of Iroquois territory for assuming
that they have a right to determine where Jews should live in Jerusalem."
Thus did Israeli government press director Daniel Seamen caustically
dismiss President Obama's opposition to Israel's right to "natural
growth" of its settlements in Arab East Jerusalem and on the West
Bank.
Though Obama's address in Cairo broke no new ground, it confirmed
to the world that a new day has arrived and a sea change has taken
place. The Israel-centric Middle East policy of George W. Bush is
dead. And with the policy change has come rhetorical change.
With Bush, it was "axis of evil," "you are with us or you are
with the terrorists," "regime change," a "green light" for war on
Hezbollah in Lebanon and on Hamas in Gaza, and "this war is a struggle
between good and evil."
With Obama in Cairo, it was all about "a new beginning" and
"mutual respect" between the United States and an Islamic world
of 1.2 billion.
Where Bush sought to isolate Syria as a state sponsor of terror,
Obama has sent diplomats and is sending the U.S. military to Damascus
to work together to halt al-Qaida infiltration into Iraq. Return
of the Golan Heights may be back on the table.
Where Bush said Iraq's drive for weapons of mass destruction
threatened America and the world, Obama calls Iraq "a war of choice,"
and re-commits to bring all U.S. combat troops home before 2012
and to seek no permanent bases there.
Where Israeli hawks push for pre-emptive U.S. strikes on Iran's
nuclear facilities, Obama says Iran "should have the right to access
peaceful nuclear power if it complies with its responsibilities
under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty."
As there is no hard evidence Iran has gone beyond the NPT,
this points to a resolution of the nuclear issue, if Tehran can
provide solid assurances it has no clandestine weapons program.
Where
Bush refused to meet with Yasser Arafat or recognize Hamas' election
victory, and outsourced Mideast policy to Ariel Sharon and Ehud
Olmert, Obama has confronted Bibi Netanyahu and handed Israel an
ultimatum: Halt all settlement growth, now, and come back to me
with your plan for a Palestinian state.
A collision that could shatter the coalitions of both Bibi
and Barack now appears inevitable and imminent. Either the president
or prime minister is going to have to back down.
Netanyahu was elected on solemn pledges never to negotiate
with Hamas, permit a Palestinian state ("a second Hamastan") or
let Jerusalem be divided. He is committed to the "natural growth"
of Jewish settlements in Judea and Samaria.
Obama has said publicly that there is to be no growth of any
kind on the West Bank and all illegal outposts must come down.
There are reports that while Defense Minister Barak was in
the office of National Security Adviser Gen. Jim Jones, Obama popped
in for 15 minutes to tell Israel's most decorated soldier he wants
to see an Israeli plan for peace and a Palestinian state by July.
That state would necessarily have a Jerusalem enclave as its
capital, as no Palestinian or Arab leader could agree to a peace
that did not include part of Jerusalem, the Al Aqsa Mosque and the
Dome of the Rock without putting himself in mortal peril.
Behind this clash lies a shift of perspective in Washington.
Obama is directly challenging the thesis of Israel and its
lobby, AIPAC, that U.S. and Israeli interests are one and the same,
that we are partners. Barack is saying that settlements are an impediment
and an independent Palestinian state indispensable to peace. And
even if Israel believes its interests are being subordinated and
security imperiled, the United States disagrees – and the United
States will prevail.
In Israel, the betting is that Barack will break Bibi because Israel
cannot defy its last great friend, the lone superpower, upon whom
it depends for security, weaponry and diplomatic shelter from U.N.
Security Council sanctions. As Rick Wagoner of GM can tell Bibi,
you take the king's shilling, you play the king's tune.
Indeed, Obama can make a case that he better represents the
Jewish community in the United States than the Israel lobby, as
he won 78 percent of the Jewish vote.
Netanyahu was outpolled by Tzipi Livni of Kadima, who is waiting
in the wings.
Bibi is in a terrible box. If he defies Obama and orders new
housing in the settlements, he could face rebellion at home for
alienating Israeli's indispensable ally.
If he goes along with halting settlement growth and moves to
accommodate a Palestinian state with its capital in Jerusalem, how
does he explain the capitulation to Likud – and to Avigdor Lieberman?
Next weekend, Iran heads to the polls, and President Ahmadinejad
faces strong opposition. If the moderate Mir-Hossein Moussavi wins,
the possibility of a U.S.-Iranian detente rises dramatically.
For Israel and the United States, the days of wine and roses
are over.
June
6, 2009
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2009 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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