Saturday, July 02, 2011

Thomas Friedman, Courtier, Not Expert, Calls for Revolution in Israel?

Barry Rubin

Well, sort of. Friedman has tweeted:

“.@nytimesfriedman “Mubarak had 30 years to reform Egypt, then he tried to do it all in six days. Netanyahu is Mubarak of Israel” #AspenIdeas”

So in other words Netanyahu should be overthrown? President Barack Obama should call for Netanyahu to be gone right away? Or merely has Israel failed to change its policies in several decades? Incidentally, Mubarak did change a lot of Egyptian policies and was doing a credible job economically.

But back to Israel. Thirty years ago, Israel rejected dealing with the PLO, rejected a Palestinian state, and was expanding the size and number of settlements in the West Bank. Today it favors a two-state solution; accepts negotiations with the PLO’s successor, the Palestinian Authority; has pulled out of southern Lebanon and the Gaza Strip; does not create or expand settlements with a nine-month freeze in all construction at President Barack Obama’s request; and eleven years ago even offered most of east Jerusalem for a Palestinian state. You can argue that Israel is better or worse off for these changed policies but Israel’s policies have changed dramatically, in part due to Netanyahu as well as others. To believe that Israel has been intransigent is nuts. To believe that Israel has been intransigent is also an accepted belief among many Western elites.

What Friedman is doing, as always, is speaking flattery–not truth–to power. Remember Friedman is supposedly one of the people Obama consults most on Middle East policy. I’m not suggesting that Friedman literally wants a revolution to overthrow Netanyahu, but what his writings reveal–and U.S. officials often hint–is that it is Netanyahu and Israel that are blocking peace. Israel just doesn’t know what’s good for itself and needs the great minds of Obama and Friedman to come to its senses.

Let me restrict myself to three responses:

First, although I didn’t vote for him but was a parliamentary candidate for a left-of-center party, Netanyahu was elected by the Israeli public for good reason following its experiences over the last two decades. The vast majority of Israelis think he has done a good job. Indeed, the more Obama and people like Friedman attack Israel (oops, I mean Netanyahu) the more support he has gained.

Second, while the pretense is that Friedman’s line is anti-Likud or anti-Netanyahu, the reality is that this is anti-Israel, seeking to subvert policies necessary for its survival and to destroy American Jewish support for Israel. Netanyahu is not missing any great opportunities for peace, nor is his government “short-sighted” (to use another Friedman phrase).

Third, the underlying assumption is that if only Israel took more risks and made more unilateral concessions peace would be possible, even quick to arrive. We learned eleven years ago that this was nonsense. If Friedman and others haven’t learned this yet that’s their problem. What we are seeing is a systematic campaign to misrepresent reality, the fact that the Palestinian Authority and Palestinian politics are the roadblocks to peace.

Netanyahu and Israel are dealing with the reality of the Middle East, something the Obama Administration would be well advised to do. Note also that most of the American people agree with Netanyahu and Israel according to every public opinion poll. And take another look at the video of Netanyahu speaking before the joint session of Congress, with both Democrats and Republicans going wild with enthusiasm.

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