by Yoram Ettinger
President Obama's March
 2013 visit to the Middle East, including Israel, could signal a 
significant policy-change from his June 2009 visit, which excluded 
Israel. On the other hand, the introduction of the John Kerry (State 
Department) — Chuck Hagel (Pentagon) — John Brennan (CIA) team of "Palestine Firsters" may suggest that the March visit could merely be a tactical-change in pursuit of the same policy.
The 2009 visit was 
driven by an assumption that a newly-elected charismatic U.S. President 
could turnaround the U.S. economy and reform U.S. healthcare, while 
simultaneously implementing U.N.-like multilateralism, lowering the U.S.
 unilateral profile, transforming the world from confrontation to 
engagement, mollifying the Muslim World, coax Iran into abandoning its 
megalomaniac aspirations and resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict. The 2009
 visit reflected a worldview focusing on the Palestinian issue as the, 
supposed, core cause of Middle East turbulence, the crown jewel of 
Islamic policy-making, an essential link in forging an anti-Iran Arab 
coalition and the crux of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Israel was 
perceived as a secondary ally, at best, and a burden, at worst.
However, the Middle 
East has defied Obama's assumptions and worldview. None of Obama's 
Middle East goals were achieved, highlighting the increasingly violent 
and unpredictable anti-U.S. Islamic Street,
 totally independent of the Palestinian issue. The tumultuous Islamic 
Winter — from the Atlantic Ocean to the Persian Gulf — has further 
accentuated Israel as the only stable, predictable, commercially and 
militarily capable, innovative, democratic and unconditional ally of the
 U.S.
The March 2013 visit to
 Israel will take place as the threats to critical U.S. interests — 
which are endangering the entire Free World — are intensifying daily. 
The Iranian nuclear sand clockis running out, causing panic among U.S. Arab allies, exposing the futility of diplomacyand
 sanctions. The lava on the Islamic Street threatens to sweep Jordan, 
Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and additional members of the dwindling 
club of pro-U.S. Arab regimes, ridiculing the "Arab Springers." Iraq is 
disintegrating, becoming an Iranian subsidiary and an arena for global 
terrorism, rather than an island of free election, mocking the delusion 
of Arab democracy. Egypt has been transformed from a pro-U.S. outpost 
into a chief catalyst of the anti-Western transnational Muslim 
Brotherhood revolution. In contrast with the "Palestine Firsters," Arab 
leaders are preoccupied with their tectonic homefront and the lethal 
Iranian threat, not with the Palestinian issue, which has never been 
their top concern, irrespective of their rhetoric.
The March 2013 visit to
 Israel will take place at a time when the stormy Arab Winter clarifies 
that the win-win U.S.-Israel strategic cooperation does not evolve 
around the Palestinian issue, but around mutual regional and global 
threats. Thus, while the threats to U.S. targets on the mainland and 
abroad are mounting and U.S. power-projection is declining, Israel 
emerges as the only effective battle-tested allywhich can pull the hottest chestnuts out of the fire, for the U.S., without American boots on the ground.
In the face of dramatic
 threats in 2013, President Obama could facilitate a dramatic 
enhancement of the mutually-beneficial bilateral strategic cooperation. 
For example, the upgrading of Israel's port of Ashdod into a home port 
for the Sixth Fleet; the relocation of advance aircraft, missiles, tanks
 and counterterrorism systems, from Europe to Israel, for U.S. use in 
case of emergencies in Jordan and the Gulf area. U.S. focus on mutual 
threats, rather than on the Palestinian issue, would reassure Riyadh and
 deter Tehran.
The March 2013 visit 
follows the Jan. 22, 2013 Israeli election, which was dominated by "It's
 the economy, stupid!" The Israeli constituent is skepticalabout
 the "peace process" and the land-for-peace formula; does not trust 
Mahmoud Abbas; and is weary of further "painful concessions." The only 
national security challenge which concerns most Israelis is the Iranian 
nuclear threat.
In 1981, President 
Reagan pressured Prime Minister Menachem Begin brutally against bombing 
Iraq's nuclear reactor, lest it trigger a regional war. Israel defied 
the U.S., which thanked Israel following the 1991 Gulf War "for sparing 
the U.S. a nuclear confrontation." Will President Obama attempt to 
handcuff Israel, or will he leverage Israel's experienced hands to spare
 the U.S. and the Free World devastating consequences?!
President Obama may 
decide to ignore Middle East reality, subordinate U.S.-Israel relations 
to the Palestinian issue, and pressure/entice Israel into further 
concessions. He should note the negative results of U.S. pressure on 
Israel. For example, Israel's unprecedented November, 2009 ten-month 
construction freeze in eastern Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria radicalized 
Mahmoud Abbas' position. Israel's unprecedented concessions at Camp 
David, in July, 2000, triggered the Second Intifada's unprecedented wave
 of terrorism. The U.S. pressure to allow Hamas' participation in the 
Jan. 2006 election resulted in two wars in Gaza. According to Max 
Fisher's 1992 biography, "Quiet Diplomat,"
 President Eisenhower admitted that "I should have never pressured 
Israel to evacuate the Sinai," which fueled President Nasser's 
anti-American radicalism.
Yoram Ettinger
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3407
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
No comments:
Post a Comment