Obama's fractured Israel policy
Obama has pro-Israel credibility among Arabs, where it does him no good. But he lacks it where he most needs it, leaving him powerless to enforce his demand for a freeze on Israeli settlements.
Daniel Larison
As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s recent trip to Israel revealed, the Obama administration’s half-hearted policy on settlements in the occupied territories is a bust.
Anxious to placate hawkish critics at home and in Israel, Clinton declared Prime Minister Netanyahu’s settlement slowdown an "unprecedented" gesture. In reality, it was a calculated show of defiance against Washington’s call
for a settlement freeze. Clinton’s retreat provoked harsh reactions from Arab governments throughout the region, prompting a hasty retreat in which she stressed that Israel’s slowdown of settlement construction was not enough. But the damage was done. The episode undermined White House credibility and displayed the enormous constraints on emocratic opposition to Israeli policies.
Even if the settlements were legal under international law,
which they are not, they would be a major obstacle to any political settlement between Palestinians and Israelis. Aside from being a constant source of resentment among Palestinians, the settlements have exacerbated the inequities and discrimination that are the inevitable residue of colonization. Yet settlements are not only yesterday’s affront; they represent a continuing effort to change the political reality on the ground -- to the detriment of Palestinians. The Obama administration seems to understand that, which is why it called for a freeze. It’s just not willing to force the issue because the political risks are too great.
Obama has earned harsh criticism for his opposition to settlement building, even though this stand has been formal American policy for decades. (Obama is simply the first president since George H.W. Bush to take it somewhat seriously.) Throughout the presidential campaign and the past year, the president has struggled against the impression that he is unduly sympathetic to Palestinian aspirations and somehow hostile to Israel. He is perceived as "unreliable" and "untrustworthy" by Israelis and a majority of Israelis reportedly believe Obama is "pro-Palestinian." Given Obama's full support of Israel’s excessive military operation in Gaza earlier this year, that seems ludicrous. But such suspicions have hamstrung the administration, making it difficult to criticize Israeli policy and virtually impossible to compel Israeli concessions.
Perversely, Obama has pro-Israel bona fides among Muslim states, where his overtures to Muslim audiences, including his Cairo speech, are discounted as a result. He gets scant credit for making an effort to engage Muslims. Likewise, there is no political gain for Obama if he makes a more strenuous effort to pressure Israel. Few domestic allies would assist him and those who might -- including the new pro-Israel lobbying organization, J Street -- have little to offer.
Indeed, J Street shares the White House’s debilitating posture -- a public opposition to Israeli occupation policies tempered by an abject unwillingness to use U.S. influence to change Israeli behavior. Progressive critics of Israeli policy must walk a fine line to avoid giving the appearance of indifference to Israeli security concerns. In an interview last month, J Street director Jeremy Ben Ami ruled out even threatening to reduce American aid to Israel, which is the main source of U.S. leverage. By such logic, progressives effectively surrender any chance of ersuading Israel to change its course.
J Streeters and their allies know that if they push too hard, they will be accused of ‘selling out’ Israel to its enemies, a politically devastating charge. Consequently, the only people who are truly interested in a political settlement between Israelis and Palestinians resort to a defensive crouch, tolerating mild imitations of hawkish policies that they believe serve no one’s interests. If the nation¹s leading "pro-peace, pro-Israel" lobby is unwilling to advance its preferred policies, why would an administration already struggling to defend its pro-Israel reputation take a risk? The answer, as Clinton’s last visit reminds us, is evident in the Obama administration’s confused policy of half-measures. These have done nothing to allay Israeli mistrust. But they have gone far to disillusion the
rest of the world.






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12 Comments
Posted by jerry friedman, Friday, November 13, 2009, 4:13 pm Why should Israel give up a bargaining chip in advance? Let the palestinians sit down without preconditions and bargain. They want a conclusion without the sweat. Imagine if Israel set a precondition that Hamas and fatah had to merge before anything else?
Posted by Mladen Matosevic, Friday, November 13, 2009, 8:50 pm Let's wait next president then... Palestinians will not go anywhere on own free will and won't sign for anything much less then borders of 1967. Meanwhile, number of Jews in USA is certainly don't growing as fast as number of Muslims. Remember, sanctions to Israel are not necessary, just cutting aid will be enough. With current policy, Israel is getting despised in Europe more and more every day. Apartheid seems inevitable,but what will USA do if Israel goes for ethnic cleansing? Otherwise things are heading to one binational state in the end.
Posted by Jubal Biggs, Saturday, November 14, 2009, 4:12 am Two things firstly, international law does not disallow a private citizen from purchasing or building on land under question in an international dispute which is what about 90 of the settlements are. Even a leading member of Peace Now has admitted that MOST settlements are not illegal under international law. Second why would it be ludicrous to believe Obama is not trustworthy relative to Israel when he explicitly said he supported an undivided Jerusalem in his AIPAC speech as a candidate, then reversed himself the NEXT DAY?
Posted by owldog, Saturday, November 14, 2009, 12:03 pm Agree. But it is truly a lonely cause when those who seek human rights for Palestinians are labeled antisemitic. Unfortunately, over time antisemitic will no longer represent the like of the nazis, but the abuse of the word will result in a more kindly connotation of antisemitic.
Posted by owldog, Saturday, November 14, 2009, 12:17 pm J street is composed of good people, who have good intentions, but their platform will NOT include a onepersononevote agenda. They want the twostate solution however impossible it might be, and accept that a tribal, ethnically pure Jewish State has a right to exist. They are bound to fail. Like the neoconservative Democrats in the 1990's, when voters are choosing between neoconservatives and neoconservatives wannabees. People will either vote for the real thing, or not vote at all.
Posted by Drew. C., Sunday, November 15, 2009, 2:58 am 'Palestinians' ..have a problem for every solution.' We all know that Hamas dictatorship in the Mid East is the front that hates and wants to exterminate Israel. Given this then, I throw all my support behind Israel no matter what. Hamas and islam are cults of hatred.
Posted by Pickens W. Irvine, Sunday, November 15, 2009, 11:19 am My proposed solution to the conflict is to CREATE more land by doubling the area of the Gaza Strip by a landfill extending into the Mediterranean Sea. A second landfill should be constructed on the west coast of Israel to accomodate the relocation of Jewish settlers from the West Bank. This proposal is neither proIsraeli nor proPalestinian it is simply propeace. Manmade islands in Dubai prove it is feasible. It should be politically possible to support peace in the Holy Land.
Posted by Marco Blaze, Monday, November 16, 2009, 4:08 am Israel doesn't exist. It was never approved by the original inhabitants of the lands and is therefore illegitimate.
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