- Details
-
Written by M.J. Rosenberg M.J. Rosenberg
-
Category: News News
-
Published: 24 June 2009 24 June 2009
-
Last Updated: 24 June 2009 24 June 2009
-
Created: 24 June 2009 24 June 2009
-
Hits: 5298 5298
Netanyahu Believes Obama Has Already Backed Down On Settlements
M.J. Rosenberg
Talking Points Memo (Opinion)
June 23, 2009 - 12:00am
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu believes that President Obama has
already blinked. The way he sees it, Obama made his demand to stop
settlements in Cairo. He, Netanyahu, responded with a firm "no" -- but
by uttering the phrase "two states" changed the subject suficiently to
get Obama off his back. He also thinks the Iran crisis has diverted
Obama's focus away from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and saved him
from further pressure.
There is no other way to interpret Netanyahu's dismissal of the
settlement issue in his interview with RAI TV in Italy. Settlements? "I
think that the more we spend time arguing about this, the more we waste
time instead of moving towards peace," he said.
He added that his conditional endorsement of a Palestinian state is all
that matters. "A demilitarized Palestinian state that recognizes the
Jewish State of Israel I think is the winning formula of peace," he
said. "I can not understand why anybody who wants peace should reject it."
And, of course, no one does reject it, certainly not the Palestinians
who accepted the two-state formula fifteen years ago and remain
committed to it. It is just that unless Israel stops settlements, there
will be no place for that state to go. And just yesterday the Israeli
government authorized another 500 housing units in Har Homa, a West Bank
settlement -- a gigantic slap in Obama's face. The US response: silence.
Former Israeli Defense Minister, Moshe Arens, from Netanyahu's Likud
party told us exactly what the government is thinking in a wonderfully
frank Ha'aretz column on Tuesday. "There was a time before the State of
Israel was established when the Jewish people had no choice but to take
orders from others...We will gladly accept advice, but not orders."
Netanyahu believes that President Obama has gone as far as he intends to
go and that he need only dig in to win. Is he right? The longer we have
to wait for an answer, the more likely that he is.
Israel-Palestine is the test. It is the one issue all Arabs and Muslims
(and most of the world) is in substantial agreement i.e., that the
occupation must end and the two state solution must be implemented.
As Obama said about Iran, the whole world is watching. If the
administration flinches, it will be noticed. And our credibility in the
Middle East will go back to where it was before Jan. 20. That will be
despite all the progress this President has already made in repairing
our tattered reputation.
President Obama cannot allow that to happen.