Monday, January 23, 2012
The Unvarnished Reality of Contemporary U.S.-Israel Relations
The following article was published in Maariv newspaper in Hebrew.
By Barry Rubin
Do not speak of it in public. Do not expect any
Israeli official to admit it. But Israel is facing an issue unlike anything it
has had to deal with during the past 50 years: It cannot depend on the United
States.
True, the relationship in terms of weapons’ supply
remains good. Old programs continue to provide advanced arms to Israel. Nor is
the problem the one most people think of first: on Israel-Palestinian, “peace
process” issues.
President Barack Obama’s Administration has seen
that no real progress is possible on that front. It tends to blame Israel in public and Obama
intensely dislikes Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu but those problems have
little material effect. If that personal matter were the only issue involved Israel could muddle through
as it has with other presidents.
The difficulty with Obama is that his entire
strategy in the Middle East is contrary to Israeli interests, except for
putting some sanction’ pressure on Iran regarding its nuclear weapons’ program. The greatest threat to Israel today is the
rise of radical Islamist regimes. Here is how Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh puts
it:
"The Palestinian cause is
winning. With the Muslim Brotherhood part of the government [in Egypt], they
[the Egyptians] will not besiege Gaza. They will not arrest Palestinians. They
will not give cover to Israel to launch a war....Israel is disturbed by this.
It knows the strategic environment is changing. Iran is an enemy. Relations are
deteriorating with Turkey. With Egypt, they are really cold. Israel is in a
security situation they have never been in before."
Even though Israel has faced worst strategic situations and the
Islamists are badly divided, Haniyeh has put his finger on the central
strategic factor today. Radical Islamists who want to open a new round of
battle against Israel now rule or are likely to do so very soon in Egypt, Gaza,
Iran, Lebanon, Libya, Tunisia, and Turkey.
Here is where the problem with the United States comes in. Obama does
not really view this trend as a threat. He spent the first half of his term
engaging with Iran and its ally Syria. Obama and his administration regards the
Islamists as people who are either already moderate or are likely to become so by
governing.
This is, of course, the opposite of the Israeli assessment. In Syria, the U.S. government even helped
organize and supports an external opposition leadership in which Islamists form
the majority even though it is doubtful that this reflects their level of
support within the country.
To put it bluntly, the U.S. government does not even recognize the
existence of the number-one threat to Israel.
And to make matters worse, the government that Obama looks to for
advice, guidance, and interpretation of the region is not Israel but the
Islamist regime in Turkey. That government’s sharp turn to a highly emotional
anti-Israel policy has not cost it anything at all in terms of its relations
with the White House, something that would have been unthinkable under any
previous president.
That is why Israel, as well as the Middle East generally, is going to
be an important issue in this year’s presidential election. To preserve relations with the United States,
Israeli leaders will neither do nor say anything about that contest. Yet
nothing could be more obvious than that Obama’s reelection would be extremely
damaging for Israel’s security.
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