Obama Was Unconvinced By Bibi's Desire For Peace
Barack Obama, they say, did not get on well with Bibi Netanyahu when he met him in Jerusalem before the American elections.
Mr Obama, who figured out the Middle East pretty quickly, apparently found Bibi arrogant and unconvincing in his professed desire for peace with the Palestinians. What Mr Netanyahu thought of Mr Obama is not known, but he could scarcely have tried to hide his election line: security for Israel, but no Palestinian state.
Much depends, of course, on whether Tzipi Livni will consent to join a Netanyahu government. For if Avigdor Lieberman slips into a ministerial position, Obama is in trouble. Does he congratulate a new Israeli prime minister who has introduced into his government a man who is prepared to demand loyalty signatures from his own country's Arab minority? How would that go down in the United States, where a similar proposal - for a loyalty pledge by American minorities, for example - would be a scandal?
But those Palestinians who believe that Lieberman should be in a Netanyahu administration - on the grounds that the "true" face of Israel would then be clear to all Americans - are being a little premature. Obama is not going to change the US relationship with Israel. American foreign policy - like that of most states - is based not on justice but on power.
And with America enduring the worst economic crisis since the Depression, Mr Obama is not going to take on the Israelis. Those Arabs who still fondly hope that the new US administration will at last "stand up" to Israel are mistaken. And the Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, who would like to be the next Democrat president, is certainly not going to anger Israel or its supporters in Washington.
If Mr Netanyahu does form a government, however, it will prove that the slaughter in Gaza did not help Ms Livni's efforts to form her own cabinet. Ehud Barak and Livni, the authors of the whole bloody offensive (with the active help of Hamas' own provocations), will simply put Gaza behind them - until Mr Netanyahu decides on a second round of the battle against "world terror".
Yet it's interesting to note how easily the connections between Gaza and the Israeli election have faded away. Indeed, when The Economist was surveying the Middle East earlier this month, it suggested that the outrage over the Gaza killings expressed by the Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, to Israel's President Shimon Peres at Davos was a "temper tantrum" which may have been "a ploy to please voters" before Turkish municipal elections next month. Yet the magazine merely noted that "the unconcluded Gaza war and the [Israeli] elections are intertwined in voters' minds…"
Mr Netanyahu, it should be remembered, said the Gaza war ended too soon. So are we waiting for Part Two? Or the next round in Israel's war with the Hizbollah? Israelis must sometimes curse the proportional electoral system that brings them the most ungovernable government coalitions. But the Americans will find it hard to dress up a new Netanyahu government as further "progress" in the Middle East "peace process".




Re: Obama Was Unconvinced By Bibi's Desire For Peace
By Shapiro, Tali at Mar 08, 2009 13:49 PM
Well, it's two weeks after this article has been written and, once again, my government is riddled with criminals (war and otherwise). Lieberman is only the most popular belle at the ball, but next time, he'll be prime minister. The Palestinians will get their second Nakba and we'll all cross our fingers that the hell fires will flame so high that finally the world will be brought to a boil. The current government will probably disassemble within two years, and seeing as there's no getting away from the Liebermonster, the quicker we get this part over with, the better. And after Israel is named the Fourth Reich, maybe we'll finally get a little peace. Fisk, you understate.
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Provocation
By Nobes, Bob at Feb 23, 2009 07:08 AM
We seem to get in a loop here that without Hamas provocation, the offensive would not have started and without the IOF, Hamas might not have been provoked but Robert Fisk's normally balanced view has been disrupted by a loose sentence is my take.
His point about Obama and Clinton not wanting to upset Israel or the Jewish lobby is well founded as the sale of arms and the receipt of donations respectively hold a strong sway on US policy, even more so in the current global economic climate. Am I being naive in thinking that peace talks, truces and the like will never be viable whilst there is money to be made by both the US and Europe in selling arms, good and support to both parties?
Perhaps it is not a question of power or justice but as always, it's the economy stupid!
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Re: Provocation
By Andrews, John at Feb 23, 2009 08:19 AM
Bob
I see today that Amnesty International have called for an arms embargo against both Israel and Hamas on the grounds that they have both committed war crimes (I do detest that term as I believe that all war is a crime). Now that would be a real neat solution but, as you say, USA / UK / France / Russia / China would never allow it as it would be a restraint on free trade - the trade to supply arms to kill people.
Best wishes
John Andrews
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Re: Re: Provocation
By Nobes, Bob at Feb 23, 2009 09:22 AM
Thanks John
Excellent point.
Saw it in The Guardian after my post. To emphasise the point arms sales revenue alone for the US amounts to $30bn. What can one say?
kind regards
Bob
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