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Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Bibi, please talk to us

Isi Leibler is right. It's time for our own great communicator to talk to us.
BUT IT is now clear that, irrespective of what concessions Netanyahu offered, short of capitulating to all the one-sided US demands, Obama was determined to find grounds for a confrontation in order to “win over the Arabs.”

He found his pretext with the unfortunate timing of a routine announcement of a residential development in the heart of Jewish east Jerusalem which coincided with Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to Israel. Had that not transpired, an alternative pretext would inevitably have been devised.

It is therefore unfair to blame Netanyahu for the breakdown with Obama.

What transpired subsequently can only be described as an ambush. After acceptance of his profuse apology, Netanyahu made a major tactical error by convincing himself that a meeting with Obama, Clinton and other administration officials would achieve reconciliation. He was thus destabilized by the humiliation and harsh demands by Obama in private conversations which were subsequently leaked to the media.

Netanyahu’s speech at AIPAC before his meeting with Obama was the last significant policy statement he has made to date. Since then, he has hardly been heard, and brief remarks attributed to him are apologetic and defensive. He conveyed the impression that he was denying reality by repeatedly maintaining that Israel’s alliance with the United States was unchanged, and ignoring the insults leveled against him and his government.

...

Since the Ben-Gurion era, differences have occurred between the United States and Israeli leaders. But it is hard to visualize any US president behaving towards Begin, Rabin or Sharon with the contempt Obama displayed to Netanyahu. It is also inconceivable that any earlier prime minister would have held back from articulating Israel’s case in response to such a preposterous and one-sided offensive. Neanyahu was not obliged to emulate his mentor Begin in responding to Obama. He could equally have taken a cue from Labor prime minister Yitzhak Rabin.

THIS CRISIS will not abate of its own accord. If Netanyahu fails to speak up soon, he will discover that Israelis of all political streams will begin to question his credibility.

Continued paralysis will not only undermine national morale, but will also affect American Jews and our friends, who cannot be expected to be more outspoken on behalf of Israel than its prime minister. Abe Foxman of the ADL calls on American Jews to march to Washington in solidarity with Israel while our prime minister continues to recite mantras about the “unshakeable alliance.”

No wonder that until now the Presidents’ Conference has only made tepid statements about the crisis.

If the motive for Netanyahu’s silence is to try to persuade his cabinet to concede, even an iota, to demands to curtail building in Jewish neighborhoods of Jerusalem, he is paving the way to disaster. Capitulating to a US administration which has reneged on commitments to Israel undertaken by its predecessors will convince Obama that he has a free hand to impose any settlement he considers appropriate.

We will discover that the United States regards defensible borders as irrelevant, will demand a return of Jerusalem to pre-1967 status, and insist on creating an unencumbered Palestinian state that will almost inevitably become Hamastan. This will have dire long-term repercussions on security and the viability of the Jewish state. It will also reinforce the conviction of jihadists that violence and terror are succeeding, and that the Jewish state is following the path of the crusader kingdoms and will be absorbed by Islam.

The issues are stark. Our two offers to return virtually all the conquered territories were rejected outright. The Palestinians refuse to negotiate, and are escalating their demands. Yet Obama relates to us, not as a democratic ally, but as a contemptible pariah or vassal while appeasing the intransigent Palestinians.
Leibler is right. Netanyahu must speak up. For starters, he should explain his decision to attend the nuclear disarmament conference in Washington next week, which appears to be yet another opportunity for Obama to ambush him, this time in a multinational context.

There is too much that can and will go wrong if Netanyahu does not answer Obama forthrightly.

2 Comments:

At 2:30 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Last time Netanyahu spoke to us, he showed us his plan for Israel's destruction.

Perhaps it's better if Netanyahu shuts up. We should have stopped a long time ago believing anything he says, in any case.

 
At 8:05 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

Israel's most extreme Leftist, Gideon Levy, does have a good point. what does Israel believe? The truth is no one - not its friends and not its enemies - knows Israel's exact positions. Perhaps that is at the root of Netanyahu's communication problem. You would think a man so gifted in English could explain Israel's own case to his own country in Hebrew. If he can't, then there's no way Israel will be able to stop all the demands for concessions expected of it in the future.

That's scary.

 

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