Netanyahu’s Victory

[Yeglesias, a liberal/left/Democrat, is not happy with the way the winds are blowing.]

YGLESIAS, THINK PROGRESS

To further the weekend pushback against the idea that Bibi Netanyahu is somehow blundering by showing Barack Obama the back of his hand, read this article in the Hill:

“It would undermine Israel’s strategic depth, increasing its vulnerability to both military invasions and the sorts of rocket and missile attacks that Hamas carries out in Gaza,” Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.), head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said Friday in a statement. “Doubling down on failed policies will not lead to the changes we need. It’s time for the Obama administration to change course.”

Rep. Steve Rothman (D-N.J.) delivered a similar message, arguing that reverting the borders would only embolden Hamas to launch more attacks. […]

Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) echoed that sentiment, saying the 1967 borders “were simply not defensible, and Israel must not be made to return to them.”

It’s noteworthy that these attacks not only involve misrepresenting what Obama said, but that many of them are coming from members of Barack Obama’s party. So in sum what we saw this week is that the President of the United States made it clear that he disagrees with the regional policy of the Israeli government, but despite that disagreement intends to keep Israel as the number one recipient of US foreign aid and that he also intends to put America’s diplomatic clout at Israel’s disposal in the coming controversy over a Palestinian declaration of statehood. Meanwhile, despite Obama’s lack of desire to shift US policy, he’s subject to opportunistic political attacks from members of the opposition party, attacks which are echoed rather than rebutted by members of his own political coalition. Meanwhile, despite an overhyped trend toward younger Jewish American adopting more sympathetic views toward Palestinians, the fact of the matter is that the Palestinian cause is deeply and increasingly unpopular in the United States:

The upshot is that with a series of bold strokes following Barack Obama’s inauguration, Netanyahu has debunked the Barak/Sharon/Olmert/Livni centrist conventional wisdom that has previously dominated Israeli politics. It turns out that it’s not true that Israel needs to be willing to make tactical concessions to the Palestinians or even be polite to the White House in order to retain American support. Israel has a basically free hand to behave as it wishes, taking the pieces of the West Bank it wants. And note that the populist nationalist parties gaining steam in Europe are, as an extension of their anti-immigrant/anti-Muslim views, much more strongly pro-Israel than mainstream European parties.

If liberal American Jews think this strategy is morally wrong (I do!) or that it’s a strategic mistake for the United States to go along with it (me too!), that it involves denying sufficient weight to the objective humanity of Palestinians, then we ought to say that. Simply assuming that it can’t work is, I think, a slightly naive read of the situation.

May 24, 2011 | 7 Comments »

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7 Comments / 7 Comments

  1. SHmuel HaLevi says:
    May 25, 2011 at 2:18 pm

    Much as the Oslo “accords” propelled Islam worldwide, Mr. Netanyahu just reversed that.

    Netanyahu is offering more than Rabin, the signer of the Oslo Accords, ever agreed to.

  2. A masterfull PR sequel that, if suported by hard nosed follow ups, shall mark the turning point of not just the ill intented plans of the Islamics in the region, but fold back some of their inroads elsewhere.
    Much as the Oslo “accords” propelled Islam worldwide, Mr. Netanyahu just reversed that.
    Excellent work Bibi!

  3. Bibi did really well, exceptionally well. Not only did he lay out the paremeters of a peace that Israel could live with politically, he did a rope-a-dope with the Palis by saying that by keeping the large “settlements”, he would cede some of the other outposts. Knowing that the Palis will never agree to those terms, those outposts will stay and grow, extending future borders. In baseball terms, bibi hit the grand slam.

  4. In the midst of a global islamic jihad, why are liberals puzzled that Americans would be backing Israel over the so-called “palestinians”? Liberals, in contrast to the vast majority of Americans, are incapable of distinguising between right and wrong, good and evil. They are moral relativists.

  5. When Joe Scarborough was asked by Mark Halperin if he believed Pres. Obama was “firmly committed to Israel’s security,” Scarborough refused to give a yes or no answer, which Halperin requested and called him on, which is fine, but then he said this:

    “I think the President is firmly committed to Middle East peace… what he defines as Middle East peace and I think he’s less concerned about Israel’s security than other presidents in the past, Democrats and Republican alike. …” – Joe Scarborough

  6. Robert Wexler, a big Jewish supporter of Obama, wrote in a WSJ article today that Obama was misunderstood. Obama said, “The borders of Israel and Palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps, so that secure and recognized borders are established for both states.” but Wexler says, his critics take that to mean the ’67 lines ignoring the swaps. I got news for Wexler, they ignored the swaps because they will do nothing to make these borders defensible. The deficiency cannot be corrected with swaps nor is there any reason to give them 100% of the land as he is implying.

  7. His last sentence “Simply assuming that it can’t work is, I think, a slightly naive read of the situation.” shows Yglesias to be the naive one. This is not an unfounded assumption. There is more than ample evidence to support the belief that it won’t work especially when its the neck of the Israelis that is on the chopping block.

    He is also wrong to say keeping some of the land is “morally wrong”. What could he possible say in support of that proposition.