US Secretary of State John Kerry has told a group of American 'Jewish leaders' that
he knows what's good for Israel better than that country's elected leadership.
An optimistic-sounding Kerry asked the Jewish
leaders for their help in supporting the newly restarted talks, The
Times of Israel learned, saying that he feared for Israel’s future if a
peace deal is not reached.
Kerry told the fewer than two-dozen
representatives of Jewish organizations that he really believes that
both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority
President Mahmoud Abbas realize that there is a strategic imperative to
act now. He noted that Israel faces the threat of diplomatic isolation
and a demographic clock.
A number of the Jewish leaders pressed Kerry
on Abbas’s upcoming address to the United Nations General Assembly. They
expressed hope that Abbas would change the tone of his rhetoric during
his speeches to the world body — a good-faith gesture to demonstrate
outward Palestinian willingness to engage in peace talks. One observer
noted that Kerry seemed receptive to the idea.
Other Jewish representatives pushed for Kerry to ask Abbas to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.
Kerry told the leaders that one of the
lynchpins of the current peace process is the separation of Israel’s
security assurances from the general negotiations, assurances he said
would be guaranteed in a separate agreement with the US.
Of course, Kerry isn't the only one who thinks he knows what's good for Israel better than the country's leadership. So does the American 'Jewish leadership.'
The Jewish leadership was a virtual who’s who of the American Jewish
community, representing a broad political spectrum, including
representatives from the Orthodox Union as well as J Street, and
including leaders such as the Anti-Defamation League’s Abe Foxman and
the Conference of Presidents’ Malcolm Hoenlein.
Actually, the only group I see there that's not on the left is the Orthodox Union. The groups identified with the Right - the World Zionist Organization and the National Council of Young Israel (for example) were apparently not invited.
This meeting was a soft sell for most attendees, without Kerry pressing
them to take the message of support for peace talks home to their
respective communities. The hard sell — a more organized push to market
the peace talks to centrist US Jews — is anticipated to come later in
August, in the run-up to Rosh Hashanah.
Just what we needed....
The demographic clock is ticking the opposite way, as you well know, and diplomatic isolation, well, I'm not so sure:
ReplyDeleteIsrael, Cyprus, Greece sign MOU on energy and water
The only thing Kerry knows is the gentile option his grandfather took . Many of those so called leaders like Zimri Indyk also seem to know that
ReplyDeleteThanks for that link, Prof. Very interesting. Here's another one, on Israeli desalinization plants. Israel has led the world in developing extremely efficient, wastage-minimizing water technologies, i.e. drip irrigation. But there's only so far that can go. I was pleased to read the JTA article "Water surplus in Israel? With desalination, once unthinkable is possible".
ReplyDeleteI've thought for a long time that seawater desalinization was the eventual answer for Israel's water needs (as it could and should be for California and Nevada). It appears an Israeli political consensus has arrived at that conclusion and so these desalinization plant projects are underway.
Captain H - Blogger needs a "Like!" Button! I would click it for your desalination comment! Well said!
ReplyDelete