Obama came to Israel to charm us, and he
succeeded. He chose to speak directly to young people so that they would
help new U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry revitalize upcoming peace
talks.
U.S. President Barack Obama
addresses Israeli university students in Jerusalem on Thursday.
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Photo credit: Reuters |
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U.S. President Barack Obama taught us all
during his speech on Thursday at the International Convention Center in
Jerusalem how to touch the hearts of every last young person in a
tightly packed room of Israeli students. His charm offensive in the Holy
Land this week showed us our guest's truly amazing rhetorical
abilities. The advocates of peace and the advocates of security were
pleased by the king's (i.e. Obama's) declarations. Everyone walked away
with the quotations that they wanted.
This week could be titled: Obama in Wonderland.
During the first half of the U.S. president's
speech on Thursday (the sugar-coated part), Obama came off as a member
of the Likud party. He promised that Iran wouldn't go nuclear, and that
"you" — which is to say, we Israelis — "are not alone." He said that
last part in Hebrew. Obama spoke at length about the security issues
that every Israeli faces. He called to mind Osher Twito, the boy whom
Obama met in Sderot, and didn't forget to mention the five Israelis who
were killed in the bus bombing in Bulgaria last summer. He disregarded
the legion of commentators who worship him and who prophesied that Obama
would put pressure on us, dictate our agenda and impose a deadline on
us (we fear for those commentators' wellbeing once Obama is gone).
Actually, Obama didn't even mention a settlement freeze. For us, it was
like a dream.
And then came the second half of the speech
(the bitter pill), in which the U.S. president suddenly became a Peace
Now activist, his true form. Deploying the same charm and gushing
congeniality, and with equally polished rhetorical skill, Obama
explained to us (albeit with far fewer Hebrew interpolations), that
peace is possible.
"It is not just when settler violence against
Palestinians goes unpunished," he said. It is forbidden to prevent
Palestinians from tending their lands or to prevent the freedom of
movement for students in the West Bank, he proclaimed, and you cannot
expel Palestinians from their homes. "Neither occupation nor expulsion
is the answer," the president declared.
After having casting his vote for Likud, he
reached back into the ballot box, pulled out his envelope, and slipped
in a Meretz card as well. Again, it was like a dream, a bad one. It
wasn't so much his rhetoric as it was his sharp political U-turn.
Obama came to Israel to charm us, and he
succeeded. He chose to speak directly to young people so they would help
new U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry revitalize upcoming peace talks.
Obama expects Israel's young people to impel their government to make
concessions. What he may not understand is that these same young people
elected this very government, which believes in the equal burden, in all
of its manifestations. Obama — Bibi's good friend — spoke openly about
two states for two people, one of which (what's to be done) is Jewish.
The Palestinian Authority must also come to terms with this fact.
You can't say we were unimpressed by the
world's No. 1 citizen. Israel needs only 10 percent of Obama's
equanimity, improvisational skills, class and charm to hold its own
against Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, who is pitted along with Portugal
against Israel's national team in Ramat Gan on Friday.
Only time will tell whether we can add Obama to the ranks of
presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, who, during their
presidencies, oversaw the implementation of lasting peace treaties. Or,
perhaps, we'll simply remember Obama for his kingly speech, one which,
down the road, we'll add to the growing list of lofty orations.
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