George S. Hishmeh
The Jordan Times (Opinion)
November 12, 2010 - 1:00am
http://www.jordantimes.com/?news=31802


Though obnoxious, Benjamin Netanyahu is no dummy.?After all, the Israeli prime minister knows that since he got away with something the first time, he might as well take another shot at it the second time. His victim on both occasions was Joe Biden, the ever-smiling American vice president.

When Biden visited Jerusalem last March in an attempt to help kick-start the Palestinian-Israeli peace negotiations, stalled by Israeli expansionism into the occupied West Bank, the Israeli government, unbeknownst to the visiting vice president, simultaneously announced its intention to build 1,600 housing units in occupied Arab East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians hope will be their capital once their state is established.

That announcement touched off a seemingly serious crisis between the two countries and many thought the Netanyahu government would be paying a high price for its audacity.?

But contrary to all expectations, here and in Israel, President Barack Obama shockingly caved in and mended his relationship with Tel Aviv.

Last weekend, at a conference of the Jewish Federations of North America’s General Assembly in New Orleans, Biden surprisingly repeated the same line he pronounced last March, reportedly drafted by AIPAC: “When it comes to Israel’s security there can be no daylight - no daylight - between Israel and the US.”

Hardly had Biden finished his remarks, which were followed the following day by an address by visiting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, than the Israeli government repeated its earlier manoeuvre, announcing that another 1,000 housing units will be built in Arab East Jerusalem.

The US reaction was mute.?All, here and elsewhere, are still wondering about Obama’s response once he returns from his official visit to several East Asian states.

This baffling Israeli step coincided with Biden’s new assurances that“the ties between our two countries are literally unbreakable”, pointing out that the Obama administration had done more for Israel’s security than any other previous US administration.

But the State Department, as a matter of course, declared that the Israeli action was “deeply disappoint[ing]” and the spokesman wondered whether the announcement was meant “to embarrass the prime minister and to undermine the [peace] process”.

Another somewhat uplifting comment came from Valerie Jarrett, described as Obama’s confidante and White House senior adviser for Public Outreach, in a conference call she initiated with “progressives around the country, who may have been disheartened” by last Tuesday’s mid-term election results in which Obama’s Democratic Party received, as he put it, a “shellacking”.

As reported by the American Jewish news agency, Jarrett told her callers that “the president has made it very clear that he is committed to doing whatever he can to foster talks in the Middle East - that’s unwavering”.She assured her audience, which included Jewish groups, according to blogger Steve Clemons, that “that’s not a partisan issue; his commitment to that is unwavering”.

At the same time, the standing of Israel’s ultra-rightist governmentamong American Jewish groups has been noticeably diminishing.For example, when Netanyahu addressed the New Orleans conference of Jewish leaders, he was repeatedly heckled by the audience, led by Jewish Voice for Peace activists.

“I think we’ll be seeing more of this,” said M. J. Rosenberg, a former director of policy analysis for Israel Policy Forum.

There is a feeling nowadays in the US that “American Jews are divesting from Israel”, reported a Haaretz correspondent, Bradley Burston, who is on a US tour.

“This is what I was to see in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Marin County, Portland and Seattle,” he wrote.

“It’s that American Jews are divesting emotionally.They are quietly - but in terms of impact, dramatically - withdrawing altogether.”

He also quoted Thomas L. Friedman, a prominent columnist for The New York Times, as saying at a panel discussion that Israelis “are losing the American people”, explaining that when they see Obama “working hard to try to tee up an opportunity [and] all we’re asking is just test - go all the way to test whether you have a real partner. And you say ‘No, first pay me - let Pollard out of jail, have Abu Mazen sing Hatikva in perfect Yiddish, and then we’ll think about testing.’ It rubs a lot of people the wron? way.”

In a recent editorial, the Times said that “the Israelis cannot bet on the infinite patience of the Palestinian people - or the international community”.

In other words, it is high time that Obama stood up and confronted these Israeli shenanigans. After all, as he recognised, the Middle East peace is in America’s national security interests and he may only have two years to reach that goal.

Otherwise, the continued turmoil in the region, if unchecked, may mark the beginning of the end for many in the region, including abandoned Israel, a development that many in the Arab world would obviously favour.




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