Monday, March 15, 2010

Obama stoking a crisis‏

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704416904575121710380216280.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_AboveLEFTTop

The Wall Street Journal
MARCH 15, 2010

Obama's Turn Against Israel
The U.S. makes a diplomatic crisis out of a blunder


In recent weeks, the Obama Administration has endorsed "healthy relations" between Iran and Syria, mildly rebuked Syrian President Bashar Assad for accusing the U.S. of "colonialism," and publicly apologized to Moammar Gadhafi for treating him with less than appropriate deference after the Libyan called for "a jihad" against Switzerland. When it comes to Israel, however, the Administration has no trouble rising to a high pitch of public indignation. On a visit to Israel last week, Vice President Joe Biden condemned an announcement by a mid-level Israeli official that the government had approved a planning stage—the fourth out of seven required—for the construction of 1,600 housing units in north Jerusalem. Assuming final approval, no ground will be broken on the project for at least three years.

But neither that nor repeated apologies from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prevented Secretary of State Hillary Clinton—at what White House sources ostentatiously said was the personal direction of President Obama—from calling the announcement "an insult to the United States." White House political chief David Axelrod got in his licks on NBC's Meet the Press yesterday, lambasting Israel for what he described as "an affront.

Since nobody is defending the Israeli announcement, least of all an obviously embarrassed Israeli government, it's difficult to see why the Administration has chosen this occasion to spark a full-blown diplomatic crisis with its most reliable Middle Eastern ally. Mr. Biden's visit was intended to reassure Israelis that the Administration remained fully committed to Israeli security and legitimacy. In a speech at Tel Aviv University two days after the Israeli announcement, Mr. Biden publicly thanked Mr. Netanyahu for "putting in place a process to prevent the recurrence" of similar incidents.

The subsequent escalation by Mrs. Clinton was clearly intended as a highly public rebuke to the Israelis, but its political and strategic logic is puzzling. The U.S. needs Israel's acquiescence in the Obama Administration's increasingly drawn-out efforts to halt Iran's nuclear bid through diplomacy or sanctions. But Israel's restraint is measured in direct proportion to its sense that U.S. security guarantees are good. If Israel senses that the Administration is looking for any pretext to blow up relations, it will care much less how the U.S. might react to a military strike on Iran.

As for the West Bank settlements, it is increasingly difficult to argue that their existence is the key obstacle to a peace deal with the Palestinians. Israel withdrew all of its settlements from Gaza in 2005, only to see the Strip transform itself into a Hamas statelet and a base for continuous rocket fire against Israeli civilians.

Israeli anxieties about America's role as an honest broker in any diplomacy won't be assuaged by the Administration's neuralgia over this particular housing project, which falls within Jerusalem's municipal boundaries and can only be described as a "settlement" in the maximalist terms defined by the Palestinians. Any realistic peace deal will have to include a readjustment of the 1967 borders and an exchange of territory, a point formally recognized by the Bush Administration prior to Israel's withdrawal from Gaza. If the Obama Administration opts to transform itself, as the Europeans have, into another set of lawyers for the Palestinians, it will find Israeli concessions increasingly hard to come by.

That may be the preferred outcome for Israel's enemies, both in the Arab world and the West, since it allows them to paint Israel as the intransigent party standing in the way of "peace." Why an Administration that repeatedly avers its friendship with Israel would want that is another question.

Then again, this episode does fit Mr. Obama's foreign policy pattern to date: Our enemies get courted; our friends get the squeeze. It has happened to Poland, the Czech Republic, Honduras and Colombia. Now it's Israel's turn.


To: president@whitehouse.gov; 'vice-president@whitehouse.gov'
Cc: President EU Parliament; Prime Minister of Finland; Prime Minister Gordon Brown; Senator Barbara Boxer; Senator Diane Feinstein (senator@feinstein.senate.gov); senator_lieberman@lieberman.senate.gov; Senator Schumer; 'secretary@state.gov'
Subject: Making A Mountain Out Of A Molehill

Dear Mr. President,

As the WSJ clearly points out below, one has to wonder why you have decided in this matter to make a 'mountain out of a molehill.' What is so curious is that the Jewish neighborhood in question, Ramat Shlomo, is entirely within the borders of the city of Jerusalem. Ramat Shlomo was founded in 1995. All previous U.S. governments have characterized it as a Jewish neighborhood and not as a settlement. As of 2000, it had a population of 18,000, most of whom are ultra-orthodox Jews. It's location is between the neighborood of Ramot, a neighborhood with about 40,000 residents and Har Hatzvim, a high-tech industrial park located in northwest Jerusalem. Har Hatzvim is the city's main zone for science-based and technology industries, among them are Intel, Amdocs, NDS, and Teva. In addition to large companies, the park also hosts about 100 small and medium-sized high-tech companies. In 2008, Har Hotzvim provided employment for 10,000 people.

The plans in question for Ramat Shlomo have been in place for several years and it was therefore no surprise to your government. Clearly there should not have been an announcement made during the visit of Vice-President Biden, but for the U.S. government to use this as a pretext to condemn Israel when we are the only ones who have made the effort to move the peace process forward is not acceptable. Your actions have only hardened the Israeli position as we understand that you can not be trusted as an 'honest broker.'

Jack de Lowe

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