After some years, marked by tensions between them, the baron decided to pay an unexpected visit to the village. The people were very excited and turned out to give him a warm welcome. The mayor and the baron spoke of the eternal friendship between the castle and the village.
Everyone
cheered, especially when the baron promised his help in defending the
village from dangers prowling around its borders. The baron urged the
village to make peace with those forces but said he understood if it
couldn’t do so and confirmed his support for the village’s right of
self-defense.
The
people were pleased but the mayor remarked to the town clerk: “Funny he
didn’t mention his ongoing role in creating the problem.”
Of
course, President Barack Obama did not fully create the new monstrous
threats facing Israel as much as Frankenstein did his monster. But the
president did a lot to nurture these problems to life or made them much
worse by coddling Iran for most of his first term, taking a soft stance
toward Syria, praising the Turkish regime despite its anti-Israel and
even antisemitic activities, and encouraging or even supporting
Islamists who took over Egypt and are seeking to take over Syria.
Make
no mistake. Obama’s visit to Israel and the Palestinian Authority did
mark an important shift but only on part of his policy. He has given up
on promoting the “peace process” as a high priority.
While
publicly his administration blames Israel more, it also acknowledges
that it cannot press Israel into taking high risks and making big
concessions. The White House clearly knows that the PA is a large part
of the problem, though it publicly remains silent on this point and
doesn’t comprehend that the PA is almost all of the problem.
In
practical terms, that means he understands that pushing on the peace
process won’t work and trying to bully Israel will damage him in several
ways. American public opinion and Congress, including most of the
Democrats, are supportive of Israel. He has no interest in throwing away
political capital that he needs for other things in order to pursue a
goal that he knows cannot be attained.
The
main international problem he needs to deal with is the Middle East
itself, especially the two issues he focused on for his visit: Iran and
Syria. Obama intends to spend 2013 negotiating—futilely—with Iran. While
the strong sanctions against Tehran have damaged the economy they are
unlikely to force it to stop the nuclear weapons’ drive.
As
Iran gets closer to obtaining nuclear weapons, Israel’s government will
increasingly consider an attack on Tehran’s facilities. Obama has
spoken of all options being on the table and Israel’s right of
self-defense. But assuming, which seems accurate, that Obama does not
want to back an Israeli attack how is he going to restrain Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government? Obama needs Netanyahu’s
cooperation in making a very tough decision and for that the president
must have Israel feeling more secure and rewarded by the United States.
On
the second issue, Syria, another country neighboring Israel is on the
verge of a revolution that will bring the Muslim Brotherhood to power
and even more extremist Salafists into having a powerful armed presence.
While Obama still claims Syria will produce a democratic and moderate
regime, that outcome seems increasingly unlikely.
What
appears quite possible is that the weapons and training supplied with
U.S. support will be turned against Israel. So how will Obama get
Israel’s cooperation in trying to keep things quiet despite that new
threat? This, too, requires him to be friendlier to Israel on bilateral
issues.
There
is also a third issue that parallels Syria and that is Egypt, where the
Muslim Brotherhood is already in control and armed Salafist groups roam
the Sinai Peninsula. If Egypt breaks the peace treaty, Israel will call
on the United States to put pressure on Cairo, a demand that Obama
wants to avoid. Here, too, he wants Israel to exercise restraint and
once again this requires an Israel that feels the United States is
defending its back.
This,
then, is the paradox of Obama’s second-term policy toward the Middle
East. He has abandoned his earlier effort to distance himself from
Israel that he hoped would curry favor with Arabs and Muslims while, at
the same time (he thought) advancing toward Israel-Palestinian peace.
The strategy clearly didn’t work as Israel’s enemies showed themselves
unready to compromise and not eager to pursue peace.
That step is a victory for Israel.
But
Obama has not abandoned the pro-Islamist policy that has created a far
more dangerous security situation for Israel and, in fact, made
Arab-Israeli peace an even more distant dream.
In
short, he is now offering to protect Israel more while, at the same
time, he is the one who is doing just about the most to endanger Israel.
Obama has strengthened the most extreme anti-Israel, anti-democratic,
genocidal-oriented, and anti-American forces. His new foreign policy
team includes the strongest advocates of this policy, men who are either
blind or worse to the damage they are doing.
There
will no doubt be a series of crises around this problem, especially
regarding Egypt and Syria. During Obama’s second term, his bluffs will
be called on Iran as well. And there is no shortage of other potential
conflicts and ways in which U.S. interests will be seriously subverted.
Thus,
Obama’s visit to Israel represents a real shift, a policy change. Yet
Obama never talks about the ways in which his policy isn’t changing
which are far more dangerous and important.
And thus one day, Obama might have to declaim, as did Mary Shelley’s main character, Dr. Frankenstein:
“At
these moments I wept bitterly, and wished that peace would revisit my
mind….But that could not be. Remorse extinguished every hope. I had been
the author of unalterable evils; and I lived in daily fear, lest the
monster whom I had created should perpetrate some new wickedness.”
This article is published on PJMedia.
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This article is published on PJMedia.
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We need your support. To make a tax-deductible donation to the GLORIA Center by PayPal or credit card: click Donate button: http://www.rubinreports.blogspot.com. Checks: "American Friends of IDC.” “For GLORIA Center” on memo line. Mail: American Friends of IDC, 116 East 16th St., 11th Fl., NY, NY 10003.
Please be subscriber 32,186 (among about 50,000 total readers). Put email address in upper right-hand box: http://www.rubinreports.blogspot.com
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Barry
Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs
(GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International
Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press. Other recent books include The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). The website of the GLORIA Center and of his blog, Rubin Reports. His original articles are published at PJMedia.
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