by Boaz Bismuth
This week began with a 
tangible American threat to attack Syria, followed by a public relations
 campaign by U.S. President Barack Obama aimed at Congress and the 
American public. The week is ending with a defiant article by Russian 
President Vladimir Putin in The New York Times, in which he explains to 
the Americans why they are not "special," and with a list of conditions 
set forth on Thursday by Syrian President Bashar Assad -- preconditions 
before Damascus gets rid of its chemical weapons.
Yet there are those who
 say we have nothing to worry about, that it is all part of Obama's 
elaborate plan. The plan is so elaborate, actually, that it is unclear 
whether Obama himself understands it. And maybe because of this the U.S.
 president is not taking any chances, telling us instead that he is 
simply returning to deal with domestic issues because "even as we have 
been spending a lot of time on the Syria issue … it is still important 
to recognize that we've got a lot more stuff to do here in this 
government." I wouldn't be surprised if some Syrian child screams at the
 world that the king has no clothes.
The week that began in 
Washington is culminating in Moscow. This is not analysis, it is fact. 
Once the threat of an American attack evaporated in favor of talks, the 
momentum shifted to the Russians. This is not analysis, it is fact. 
Obama went into suspended mode, allowing Putin to go into activated 
mode. And to think that on August 21, the day of the chemical atrocity 
in the suburbs of Damascus, Obama could have, in the name of morality, 
life and justice, used a muscle other than his tongue. Obama was free of
 any limitation, moral or legal. Today he is boxed in (almost by choice)
 on all sides: public opinion, Congress, the U.N. Security Council, the 
European Union, the onset of talks between U.S. Secretary of State John 
Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov -- and mostly by Putin.
Incidentally, it was 
the last line of Putin's article that is the most problematic for Obama.
 The Russian president resisted Obama's claim of American 
exceptionalism, countering that "we are all different, but when we ask 
for the Lord's blessings, we must not forget that God created us equal,"
 essentially challenging the way Americans traditionally think of 
themselves -- as a special nation responsible for liberty and justice. 
Putin did this because he knows that even Obama in the new America does 
not see America as any more special than the way the British or Greeks 
see themselves as special.
A long-time American 
radio talk show host who visited Israel this week told me yesterday 
evening that even though the Americans oppose an attack in Syria, 
because they can't even find it on a map, they still want to feel 
strong; the strongest. But the conduct of their president has allowed 
Putin to declare that we are all equal, and has also allowed Assad to 
rise up and set conditions. "That is how unafraid they are," he told me.
The president's nightmare scenario
It is amazing to think 
that Assad today is establishing conditions for his country to get rid 
of its chemical weapons. If someone had pondered such a thought on 
August 21, the day the world first saw the images of the horrific 
atrocities in Damascus, we would surely have sent that person to get his
 head examined. Today Assad is permitting himself to actually demand 
from the United States that it cease threatening him, because otherwise 
he is not interested in a deal -- thereby negating the Russian solution.
 Assad understood that this is actually Obama's nightmare scenario.
And while we're 
discussing conditions, then why not ensure his future and demand an end 
to aid for the rebels – particularly after the news reports about the 
CIA beginning to train and arm them?
Assad, encouraged by 
his place in Russia's leading axis, has even put Israel on his "to-do" 
list, calling on it to relinquish its weapons of mass destruction. Assad
 is suddenly confident? It is unclear who he owes more to: Putin for his
 professionalism or Obama for his amateurishness.
Superpower reset
In the meantime, talks 
between the Russians and Americans began in Geneva on Thursday evening. 
In 2009, in the exact same hotel, then-Secretary of State Hillary 
Clinton sat with Lavrov and began a "reset" of U.S.-Russian relations. 
Four years later, devoid of pomp and ceremony in front of the media, one
 can say that America and Russia yesterday once again pressed the reset 
button, this time as equal superpowers. Ronald Reagan must be turning in
 his grave.
There is no doubt this 
past week was unique, perhaps Putin's best since succeeding Boris 
Yeltsin in 2000 and perhaps Obama's weakest since succeeding George W. 
Bush. However, it is completely uncertain that Obama and his supporters 
see things this way: From Obama's perspective, hitching the U.S. to the 
brilliant Russian plan saves him from having to attack Syria and from a 
defeat in Congress, and primarily from being Bush. It could be that he 
would rather be like Jimmy Carter. Either way, those are three reasons 
why Obama also joined Putin's fan club this week.
As per the norm, Michelle Obama 
once again came to her husband's rescue. In Wisconsin on Thursday, while
 promoting her campaign for healthy living, her slogan was "drink 
water." The only thing she and her husband are missing is a boat so that
 the legacy of Abie Nathan can take over Washington once and for all.
Boaz Bismuth
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=5693
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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