by Barry Rubin
Recent stories have reported serious consideration by the Obama Administration in a National Security Council meeting of trying to impose the terms of an Israel-Palestinian peace agreement. In his press conference following the nuclear summit, President Barack Obama backed off this possibility, returning to standard
He stated:
"I think that the need for peace between Israelis and Palestinians and the Arab states remains as critical as ever. It is a very hard thing to do. And I know that even if we are applying all of our political capital to that issue, the Israeli people through their government, and the Palestinian people through the Palestinian Authority, as well as other Arab states, may say to themselves, we are not prepared to resolve this--these issues--no matter how much pressure the
"And the truth is, in some of these conflicts the
So he returned to the idea of the
Incidentally, that was followed by a strange phrase that is both shocking yet fully within this administration's worldview:
"It is a vital national security interest of the
Now an American president can say that his country remains "a dominant military superpower" whether others like it or not, but to imply that there is some preference for the
Regarding the conflict he said that a solution will take time, "progress will be halting" and at times reversible. This suggests that the administration has learned it isn't going to make quick success here. And when a
What this suggests is that even in the current U.S.-initiated friction with
Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal.
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
According to Raymond Ibrahim in his book the Al Qaeda Reader, when Osama bin Laden talks to the West in English he implies that his attacks are based on Muslim grievances such as stationing US troops in the land of the two holy places (Saudi Arabia) or US aid to Israel. However when he communicates with other Muslims in Arabic, he makes clear that no change in US foreign policy will make any difference in his plan for Islamic Imperialism. It appears that his animus is not based on grievance, according to Ibrahim, but is simply religiously motivated jihad as it has been since 732 AD. It has just been dormant since about 1700.
It's reemergence came with the formation of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in 1928. Haj Amin al Husseini spread it to Israel in the 20s and 30s where the Russians were eminently successful in reframing it as a liberation movement in 1964, but the jihad couldn't be fielded against the West until the petrodollars were available for financing in the '70s.
Maybe somebody ought to tell this to Obama's "experts".
Post a Comment