'Bibi'
Votes Republican
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Israel
in a Post-American Era
Not since
Nikita Khrushchev berated Dwight Eisenhower over Gary Powers' U-2
spy flight over Russia only weeks earlier has an American president
been subjected to a dressing down like the one Barack Obama received
from Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday.
With this crucial
difference. Khrushchev ranted behind closed doors, and when Ike
refused to apologize, blew up the Paris summit hosted by President
de Gaulle.
Obama, however,
was lectured like some schoolboy in the Oval Office in front of
the national press and a worldwide TV audience.
And two days
later, he trooped over to the Israeli lobby AIPAC to walk back what
he had said that had so infuriated Netanyahu.
"Bibi" then
purred that he was "pleased" with the clarification.
Diplomatic
oil is now being poured over the troubled waters, but this humiliation
will not be forgotten.
What did Obama
do to draw this public rebuke? In his Thursday speech on the Arab
Spring and Middle East peace, Obama declared:
"We believe
the borders of Israel should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually
agreed swaps, so that secure and recognized borders are established
for both states. ... Israel must be able to defend itself – by itself
– against any threat."
Ignoring Obama's
call for "mutually agreed swaps" of land to guarantee secure and
defensible borders for Israel, Netanyahu, warning the president
against a peace "based on illusions," acted as though Obama had
called for an Israel withdrawal to the armistice line of 1967.
This was absurd.
All Obama was saying was what three Israeli prime ministers – Yitzhak
Rabin, Ehud Barak and Ehud Olmert – have all recognized.
To get Palestinian
and international recognition for a united Jerusalem and Israel's
annexation of the settlements around the city, Israel will have
to trade land for land.
Obama was not
saying the 1967 borders were to be the end of negotiations but the
starting point. Indeed, where else would one begin land negotiations
if not from the last recognized map?
Undeniably,
Netanyahu won the smack-down. The president was humiliated in the
Oval Office, and in his trip to AIPAC's woodshed he spoke of the
future peace negotiations ending just as Israelis desire and demand.
Nor is this
the first time Obama has been rolled by the Israeli prime minister.
Obama came into office demanding an end to all new or expanded settlements
on the West Bank and in East Jerusalem, and subsequently backed
down from each and every demand.
Fed up, his
Mideast peace negotiator George Mitchell has quit.
Politically,
too, the president has been hurt. To the world, and not just the
Arabs, he appears weak.
In Israel,
Netanyahu is seen as having stood up for Israel's vital interests
and forced an American president to back down. His right-wing coalition
is cheering him on.
Indeed, the
issue is not whether Obama has been hurt, but why Bibi, raised in
the U.S.A., who knows American politics better than any previous
Israeli prime minister, did it. Why wound Obama like that?
Why would the
leader of a nation of 7 million that is dependent on U.S. arms,
foreign aid and diplomatic support choose to humiliate a president
who could be sitting in that office until 2017?
The one explanation
that makes sense is that Netanyahu sees Obama as more sympathetic
to the Palestinians and less so to Israel than any president since
Jimmy Carter, and he, Netanyahu, would like to see Obama replaced
by someone more like the born-again pro-Israel Christian George
W. Bush.
And indeed,
the Republicans and the right, Mitt Romney in the lead, accusing
Obama of "throwing Israel under the bus," seized on the issue and,
almost universally, have taken Netanyahu's side.
This could
be a serious problem for the president and his party in 2012. For,
consider:
In 2008, Obama
won the African-American vote 95 to 4, or 16 to 1. He won the Jewish
vote 78 to 21, by 57 points, a historic landslide.
These are arguably
the two most reliable of Democratic voting blocs.
And while the
Jewish vote may be only one-seventh of the black vote, it has proven
decisive in the crucial state of Florida. Moreover, Jewish contributions,
by some estimates, may make up half of all the contributions to
the Democratic Party.
If, after hearing
an Israeli prime minister berate Obama for ignorance or indifference
to the cold realities the Jewish state faces, Jewish folks decide
Obama is bad for Israel and close their checkbooks, the impact in
a tight election could be critical.
On
the other hand, for African-Americans to see the first black president
treated like some truant third-grader by a prime minister of Israel
whose nation is deeply dependent on this country has to grate.
In the short
run, Bibi won the confrontation, hands down. Like no other leader
before him, he humiliated a U.S. president in front of the world,
forced him to revise his remarks of four days previous, then graciously
accepted the revision.
But a second-term
Obama is unlikely to forget what was done to him.
May
25, 2011
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. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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