by Barry Rubin
It's a development of such shocking proportions that it would cause an earthquake if properly noticed and evaluated. President Barack Obama's entire Arab-Israeli and Iranian policies are miserably failing, though partly concealed by theatrical events and media protection.
Consider the latest development. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner arriving at the UN General Assembly session, stated that he doesn't favor blocking the export of refined oil products to
The New York Times reported this story but grossly underplayed its implications:
"But if
Ha! If
"I think this is a bit dangerous," Kouchner said about the gas and fuel sanctions. Would that be more dangerous than
[An aside: This is the kind of phony "humanitarian" considerations that paralyze Western policy today. Sure, there is some patriotic reaction against foreign pressures in places like
[Can the West fight no war because there will be civilian casualties; cannot it not preserve its freedoms because Muslims or others might be offended? Is the "zero-harm" approach an effective way for policy to be conducted, or even for democracies to survive at all?]
Of course, French President Francois Sarkozy may reverse his foreign minister's stance. Yet still it is extraordinarily significant that such a major ally supposedly wowed by Obama's charisma and popularity, can publicly do the equivalent of throwing a pie into the president's face with no consequences.
And there is a virtual parade of pie-throwers. Obama's Arab-Israeli policy was derailed by similar responses.
Obama was slapped and pretended nothing happened.
Then the same thing happened with his
Could it be any more obvious? Obama's salient international characteristic is not popularity but weakness. Already, Obama has been defied or has buckled under to a long list of countries including:
That is why the conspiratorial notion that Obama is out to sell out
A strong argument could be made that the
Just this week, there are reports leaked by
Instead of action, the administration delivers the photo op of a meeting between Israeli and Palestinian leaders in
[After I wrote this article, I heard National Public Radio's report on this event. It explained clearly the main problem clearly as
Nahum Barnea, arguably the Israeli left's most distinguished writer, who backs a complete settlement freeze and would like to support Obama, wrote the get-together at the UN meeting, "Is a joke at the expense of an American president who tried to get involved in Middle East politics and was stung….The Americans," Barnea continued, "discovered that they want an Israeli-Palestinian agreement more than the leaders of both sides desire one."
Precisely. And in this regard nothing has changed much since 2000 when the Palestinian leadership rejected peace. That reality should have been clear to the Obama Administration from the beginning rather than its attitude of bravado about how it was going to hit the ground running and solve the conflict very fast.
Barnea concluded: Obama "is cool….Yet the
Well-put. While American opinion-makers continue to focus on Obama's "coolness" and Western Europeans cheer him—what's not to cheer in an American president who let's you do whatever you want?—the world is giving him the cold shoulder.
Barry Rubin
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