Article describes U.S. President Barack
Obama's attitude towards Israel as being "between animus and
incompetence" • Says Obama's "'head-in-the-sand' performance" on Iran
has increased the probability of an Israeli strike.
Yoni Hirsch and Israel Hayom Staff
A Wall Street Journal article published on
Saturday has examined U.S. President Barack Obama's handling of the
Iranian nuclear threat, as well as his position on Israel. The
newspaper, which is among the most widely read news publications in the
U.S., criticized Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin
Dempsey's comments from last Thursday.
Dempsey was quoted as saying that an Israeli
attack on Iran's nuclear facilities would "clearly delay but probably
not destroy Iran's nuclear programs." The newspaper called these
comments "counterproductive and oddly timed," as they came out just as
the International Atomic Energy Agency published a report saying Iran's
nuclear development program had not been hindered by sanctions and that
it had even accelerated.
"The agency has become increasingly concerned
about the possible existence in Iran of undisclosed nuclear related
activities related to the development of a nuclear payload for a
missile," the IAEA report stated.
"Since coming to office, Obama administration
policy toward Israel has alternated between animus and incompetence,"
The Wall Street Journal said. "No wonder the Israelis are upset. It's
one thing to hear from Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that he wants to wipe you off
the map: At least it has the ring of honesty. It's quite another to
hear from President Obama that he has your back, even as his
administration tries to sell to the public a make-believe world in which
Iran's nuclear intentions are potentially peaceful, sanctions are
working and diplomacy hasn't failed after three and half years."
The article said it was the Obama
administration's "head-in-the-sand performance" on Iran that had
convinced Israel that it is better to strike sooner rather than later.
"Not only is there waning confidence that Mr. Obama is prepared to take
military action on his own, but there's also a fear that a re-elected
President Obama will take a much harsher line on an Israeli attack than
he would before the first Tuesday in November."
Toward the end of the article, The Journal offered Obama
a piece of advice: "If Gen. Dempsey or administration officials really
wanted to avert an Israeli strike, they would seek to reassure Jerusalem
that the U.S. is under no illusions about the mullahs' nuclear goals —
or about their proximity to achieving them. They're doing the opposite."
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