by Caroline Glick
For better or worse, each passing day the Middle East is becoming more unstable. Regimes that have clung to power for decades are now being overthrown and threatened. Others are preemptively cracking down on their opponents or seeking to appease them.
While  no one can say with certainty what the future will bring to the  radically altered Middle Eastern landscape, it is becoming increasingly  apparent that US influence over events here will be dramatically  diminished.
This assessment is based on the  widespread view that the Obama administration has failed to articulate a  coherent policy for contending with the rising populist tides.
Last  Friday's UN Security Council vote was a case in point. On the one hand,  the US vetoed a Lebanese-sponsored resolution that criminalized  Israel's policy of permitting Jews to exercise their property rights in  Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. On the other, after vetoing the  resolution, US Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice and Secretary of State  Hillary Clinton condemned their own actions and explained why what they  did was wrong.
As Rice put it in her  explanation of the vote: "We reject in the strongest terms the  legitimacy of continued Israeli settlement activity. For more than four  decades, Israeli settlement activity in territories occupied in 1967 has  undermined Israel's security and corroded hopes for peace and stability  in the region. Continued settlement activity violates Israel's  international commitments, devastates trust between the parties, and  threatens the prospects for peace....
"While we  agree with our fellow Council members - and indeed, with the wider  world - about the folly and illegitimacy of continued Israeli settlement  activity, we think it unwise for this Council to attempt to resolve the  core issues that divide Israelis and Palestinians. We therefore  regrettably have opposed this draft resolution."
It  is important at the outset to point out that Rice's claims are either  wrong or debatable. Israel has not committed itself to barring Jews from  exercising property rights in Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. Permitting  Jewish construction in these areas does not violate Israel's  international commitments.
Moreover, there is no firm international legal basis for declaring Jewish neighborhoods and villages in these areas illegal.
It  is far from clear that Jewish neighborhoods, cities and villages in  these areas harm prospects for peace or undermine trust between Israelis  and Arabs. Jews built far more homes back when Israel was signing  agreements with the Palestinians.
Finally, it  is far easier to form a coherent argument explaining how these  communities strengthen Israel's security than an argument that they  endanger it.
BUT BEYOND the basic falseness of  Rice's statement, her condemnation of her own vote to veto the  resolution, and Clinton's similar statements, serve to send a series of  messages to the states in the region that are devastating to America's  regional posture.
Friday's Security Council  vote marked a new peak in the Fatah-controlled, US-sponsored Palestinian  Authority's political war against Israel. The war's aim is to  delegitimize the Jewish state in order to foment its collapse on the  model of apartheid South Africa.
To advance  this aim, the Palestinians seek to isolate Israel internationally by  criminalizing it in international arenas. The Palestinians have made  intense use of all UN bodies to achieve their goal. With automatic  majorities in nearly every UN body, the most obvious impediment to the  Palestinians' bid to criminalize Israel and thus bring about its  international isolation is the US's Security Council veto.
Since  the Palestinians first began using the UN to criminalize Israel in the  1970s, it has been the consistent policy of all US administrations to  use the Security Council veto to either vote down anti-Israel  initiatives or remove them from the agenda by threatening to veto them.
But  then came US President Barack Obama with his expressed interest in  reconciling the US with the anti- American and anti-Israel majorities in  all UN bodies. To this end, Obama has refused to commit himself to  using the veto to prevent the criminalization of Israel.
Capitalizing  on Obama's position, the Palestinians tried to make it as hard and  politically costly as possible for Obama to support Israel.
Friday's vote was months in the making and it was clearly inspired by the Obama administration's own policies.
Since  entering office, the president has been outspoken in his view that Jews  must be denied their property rights in Jerusalem neighborhoods outside  the 1949 armistice lines, and in Judea and Samaria. Obama has  repeatedly plunged US-Israel relations into crisis with his  unprecedented demand that the Netanyahu government adopt his  discriminatory policies and deny Jews the right to their property in  these areas.
Obama's obsession with barring  Jewish property rights provided the Palestinians with the opening to  undermine US support for Israel at the Security Council. By putting  forward a resolution condemning Israel for upholding Jewish property  rights, the Palestinians forced Obama to choose between his principles  and the US alliance with Israel.
As the  Palestinians rightly saw things, the resolution put them in a win-win  situation. Had he allowed the resolution to pass, Obama would have given  the Palestinians a strategic victory. If he vetoed the resolution, he  would be decried as a hypocrite and thus provide the Palestinians with  new justification for refusing to participate in US-mediated  negotiations with Israel. Since their goal is to delegitimize Israel,  the Palestinians have no interest in negotiating a peace deal with its  government.
IN THE weeks leading up to Friday's  vote, both houses of the US Congress made it absolutely clear to Obama  that abandoning Israel would be unacceptable. Obama and Clinton received  letter after letter signed by hundreds of congressmen and scores of  senators demanding that he stand with Israel. Recognizing the  legislators were simply reflecting the overwhelming support Israel  enjoys from the American public, Obama was forced to veto the  resolution.
Had he been interested in  preventing Friday's vote, he certainly had ample means to do so. He  could have told Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas months ago  that the administration would veto any anti-Israel resolution brought  before the Security Council. Even if Abbas had insisted on pushing  forward with the resolution, a strong, consistent message from the  administration would have minimized the significance of the event.
Obama  could also have used the Security Council's deliberations on the  resolution as a means of advancing US regional influence. The resolution  was sponsored by Lebanon, today controlled by Hezbollah - an illegal  terrorist organization.
Obama could have  capitalized on this fact not only to justify his veto, but to force the  subject of Hezbollah control over Lebanon onto the UN agenda. Such a  move would have advanced US interests twice. It would have insulated  Obama from Palestinian rebuke and it would have demonstrated that the US  has not accepted Iranian colonization of Lebanon through its Hezbollah  proxy.
BUT INSTEAD, the administration adopted a  policy it openly hated and then condemned its own behavior. In so  doing, it sent four deeply problematic messages to the region.
First, it signaled that it is deeply unserious.
Second,  it signaled to the Palestinians that, while blocked by popular US  support for Israel from joining them, the administration supports the  PA's political war against Israel. That is, Obama told the Palestinians  to continue this war against Israel.
Third, the  administration told Israel - and all its other allies - that in the era  of Obama, the US is not a credible ally. Not only does this message  weaken America's allies, it emboldens the likes of Iran and Syria and  the Muslim Brotherhood who are increasingly convinced that the US will  not stand by its allies in a pinch.
Finally, by  standing by as Abbas pushed forward with the resolution despite Obama's  repeatedly stated opposition, the president showed all actors in the  region that there is no price to be paid for defying the US. Obama did  not announce that he is ending US financial support for Fatah. He did  not state that the US is ending its training of the Fatah forces.  Instead, he sent Rice before the cameras to tell the world that he  agrees with the Palestinians, who just slapped him in the face.
The  question is why is the administration behaving this way? The obvious  answer is that it really does side with the Arabs against Israel.  Strengthening this view is the fact that since taking office, Obama has  been consistently hostile to Israel and its strategic interests.
There  is another possible explanation, however: That the administration is  simply too incompetent to understand the significance of its actions.  This explanation appears increasingly credible in light of the US's  ham-fisted handling of the revolutions raging throughout the Arab world.
In  Egypt, the administration did not simply show America's closest ally in  the Arab world the door. By legitimizing the Muslim Brotherhood, Obama  has paved the way for the next Egyptian crisis.
At the latest, this crisis will occur in September with the scheduled elections. At that point, three scenarios will arise.
1. The ruling military junta may cancel the elections and foment another rebellion.
2.  If the military permits free and fair elections, the Muslim Brotherhood  will become the most potent force in Egypt due to its unmatched  organizational capacity.
After the elections  the Muslim Brotherhood may adopt the model of Turkey's Islamist AKP  party and move Egypt into the Iranian camp while pretending it is still a  US ally.
3. After the elections, the Muslim Brotherhood may adopt the Khomeinist model and foment an Islamic revolution in Egypt.
IN  ALL these scenarios, America's strategic interests will be placed in  jeopardy. But presently, it is far from clear that the Obama  administration recognizes that these are the consequences of the  policies it adopted.
Then there is Saudi  Arabia. By supporting the anti- Mubarak forces in Egypt and the  Iranian-backed demonstrators in Bahrain and Yemen, the administration  has destroyed the US alliance with the Saudis.
This  may or may not be a positive development. Saudi Arabia has been one of  the most radicalizing forces in the Middle East at the same time that it  has been the steady engine behind the world's oil economy.
Whether  wrecking the US-Saudi alliance is a good thing or a bad thing, it's  unlikely that the current US government recognizes either that it has  been destroyed, or that this has happened in large measure as a  consequence of the administration's behavior.
From  an Israeli perspective, whether motivated by an animus towards Israel  or extraordinary incompetence, the Obama administration's Middle East  policies offer one message.
We can only rely on  ourselves and so we'd better strengthen ourselves as much as possible  as quickly as possible in every possible way.
Original URL: http://www.carolineglick.com/e/2011/02/obamas-devastatingly-mixed-sig.php
Caroline Glick
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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