By
Barry Rubin
In
response to criticisms--presumably including mine--of Secretary of Defense Leon
Panetta's speech on the Middle East, Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said:
“The
speech was very clear, the Secretary said there’s an unshakeable commitment to
Israel’s security and he noted that the US is willing to be a partner in forging
a lasting peace in the Middle East. He also said, and this is common sense,
folks, it’s common sense for Israel and other countries in the region, as well
as the Palestinians to talk. And he did says that the Israeli’s should look to
mend fences."
The
Obama Administration seems to believe that merely repeating endlessly that they
support Israel and its security is a substitute for actually supporting Israel
and its security in real life.
To
say that Israel and the Palestinians should talk might seem like "common sense."
But to repeatedly imply that the lack of talk is Israel's fault is unfriendly to
Israel. The Obama Administration never points out publicly-that the absence of talks--and this can be thoroughly documented--is due entirely to the
Palestinian Authority. In addition, the Palestinian Authority is currently in
partnership with Hamas, a factor that has some effect on both Israeli
perceptions and Palestinian policy.
Panetta's
"order" for the two sides to get to the "damn" table comes across as a demand
for Israel to make more unilateral concessions to do so despite its having made
so many unrequited and unappreciated such concessions during the last three
years. That is precisely the correct interpretation of the administration's
stance.
To
say that Israel should "mend fences" with Arab states and Turkey is put in the
context that the breaking down of those fences is Israel's fault. Yet it is
Egypt which has had a revolution which, it is now clear, is leading to power
being in the hands of the Muslim Brotherhood and even more radical Salafists who
are openly committed to Israel's destruction, opposed to a two-state solution,
and frequently speak in antisemitic and genocidal language.
As
a result, Israel isn't just mending the border fence with Egypt. It is rapidly
building a stronger one, has created a new brigade to reinforce the border, and
set up a new intelligence unit to monitor threats from the largest Arab state,
where the Obama Administration seems to see no threat and no problem.
It
is Turkey whose Islamist government has changed policy and is clearly on an
anti-Israel vendetta including a demand that Israel end all--repeat
all--sanctions against the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip. This same Turkish regime
colluded and encouraged an international terrorist group, the IHH, to send a
group of jihadists on a ship in order to attack Israeli forces and set off a
crisis.
As
for Lebanon, a new regime comprised of Hizballah and other Iranian-Syrian
clients took power, committed to the destruction of Israel, being even more
radical and aggressive than preceding governments. More radical regimes are also
taking power in Tunisia and no doubt soon in Libya.
To
ignore these events--which the Obama Administration has encouraged and helped
make possible--is not to be a strong ally of Israel. To blame Israel for the
deterioration of its security due in large part to U.S. policy is neither
friendly nor supportive.
The
Middle East situation does not exist beyond space and time. Israel is
frantically signalling to Washington its deep concern about the direction of
events and the damaging effect that U.S. policy is having on its security. The
Obama Administration is ignoring these signals, echoed by certain American Jews
who are being motivated by ignorance, overall loyalty to Obama, or just plain
social-climbing ambitions. In short, this might satisfy some Jewish donors who
want to sit down in a meeting with Obama so they can brag about it but has no
reassuring or persuasive effect in Israel.
The
explanations offered by Little and other administration spokesmen are
nonsensical. To paraphrase President Abraham Lincoln, you can fool some of the
people who live in New York some of the time, and you can fool some of the
people who live in Washington DC all of the time. But you can't fool the people
who actually live in Israel.
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