by David M. Weinberg
From the first day, the
 Obama administration has suggested to Israel that resolution of the 
Israeli-Palestinian conflict would help the administration "line up its 
ducks" across the Arab world to confront Iran.
In other words, the 
administration implicitly, and at times explicitly, created linkage 
between the Palestinian and Iranian diplomatic issues. The pressure was 
on Israel to concede and compromise with the Palestinians so that 
Washington could "better" tackle the Iranian nuclear threat.
Now that the 
administration is seeking detente with Iran -- a detente that explicitly
 includes American acceptance of Iran's nuclear enrichment program to a 
certain degree -- the linkage argument has lost its force.
Not only does 
Washington no longer "need" Israeli concessions to the Palestinians to 
draft moderate Arab countries into a coalition against Iran, but the 
U.S. has lost the support of the same Arab countries it wished to draft,
 such as Saudi Arabia. Without connection to anything Palestinian, 
President Barack Obama has pushed Israelis and Saudis into a coalition 
more than ever before, against both Teheran and Washington.
At the Saban Forum in 
Washington last month, Prime Minister Netanyahu reverted to a linkage 
argument of his own. Netanyahu said the efforts to negotiate a peace 
arrangement between the Palestinians and Israel "will come to nothing if
 Iran succeeds in building atomic bombs. A nuclear-armed Iran would give
 even greater backing to the radical and terrorist elements in the 
region. It would undermine the chances of arriving at a negotiated 
peace. I would say it would undermine those peace agreements that we 
have already reached with two of our neighbors."
Netanyahu's argument 
for linkage is diametrically opposed to the Obama administration's 
contention. For Netanyahu, the linkage is in reverse. The rollback of 
Iran is necessary for peace with the Palestinians to emerge, and not 
vice versa.
It's hard to imagine 
the flimsy regime of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas 
surviving an Iranian-backed Hamas assault on a peace accord with Israel 
as long as Iran continues to ride high and mighty in the region.
The Palestinians also 
make a link between their issue and the Iranian issue. Specifically, 
they learned from the American diplomatic collapse in Geneva to give 
Washington no concessions in terms of territory, refugees or border 
controls. After all, the Palestinians see that Iran's persistence in 
retaining all its nuclear properties pays off. Washington acquiesced in 
the easing of sanctions against Iran without Teheran really giving up 
any significant hard assets.
Abbas learns from this 
to hang tough and wait for Washington to shunt Israel's concerns aside, 
just as Obama did on the Iranian issue in Geneva.
In the present situation, 
Netanyahu has, quite bluntly, even less reason to trust the Obama 
administration than he did before. Netanyahu should now be saying to 
Obama: If you're not going to protect Israel and the region from the 
Iranians, expect less cooperation from me on other files. You screwed 
Israel over Bushehr, so don't expect me to give you Yitzhar. America is 
not the only party that can play linkage politics.
David M. Weinberg
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=6873
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
2 comments:
We hope this is true and Bibi will stand firm. May this 10th visit from the idiot Kerry be his last to Israel. He would be better spending his time fixing the US's problems with Asia than wasting time in a hopeless task of changing Arab Muslims into nice guys. Such a miracle is far above his pay grade.
I totally agree with you about the futility of trying to "make peace" between Israel and the PA. In my opinion it is worse than futile, because it raises the hopes of some, and those hopes will surely be dashed. But I do take issue with characterizing ALL Arabs or Muslims in any particular way. True, political Islam is the world's biggest threat today. But let's not fall into the trap of seeing all followers of Islam or all Arabs as evil.
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