by Isi Leibler
       The gloves are off. The White 
House has now unequivocally designated Israel as the scapegoat and is 
meting out punishment for the disastrous outcome of the peace 
negotiations it initiated. The process began in March when President 
Obama publicly lambasted Prime Minister Netanyahu in a brutal and 
offensive manner the day before their scheduled meeting in Washington. 
It climaxed last week when the White House reneged on its commitment to 
Israel, announcing that it would continue business as usual with the new
 PA government after the merger with the genocidal Hamas, the terrorist 
organization which remains utterly committed to the destruction of 
Israel.
      
       Prior to this, administration 
spokesmen had been campaigning behind the scenes to undermine the 
standing of Israel with the American public. That Israel had frozen 
settlement construction for nine months and conceded to an abhorrent 
release of bloody Palestinian terrorists were facts they simply ignored.
 Conversely, the Palestinian refusal to make a single concession or 
agree under any circumstances to an end of conflict was rarely 
mentioned.
      
       Even following the announcement 
of the PA-Hamas union, Secretary of State John Kerry continued blaming 
Israel, making bizarre predictions about it becoming an “apartheid 
state”, which followed his earlier warnings of an impending “third 
intifada” and “international boycotts” - all of which he subsequently 
retracted.
      
       Kerry’s views were echoed by his
 envoy, Martin Indyk, whose feral hatred of Netanyahu should have 
disqualified him from assuming any mediating role. When Netanyahu agreed
 to the wretched terrorist release, he made it clear to both the US and 
the PA that construction in the settlements would resume. Yet, in a 
series of “background” and open briefings, Indyk laid the primary blame 
for the collapse of the peace negotiations on Israel for having 
announced building tenders for 700 homes, not in some obscure or 
isolated settlement, but in Gilo, a suburb existing for over 40 years in
 the heart of Jewish East Jerusalem. And so it was that this 
“provocative action”, the “poof” which scuttled negotiations, became the
 basis for condemning Israel by the administration.
      
       To make matters worse, 
unsubstantiated allegations were circulated that Israel was engaging in 
massive espionage activity against the United States. Despite angry 
disclaimers from Netanyahu and leading government officials, the 
Administration failed to refute the charges which were even used to 
justify denying Israel eligibility for the US Visa Waiver Program.
      
       However, with Obama’s current 
catastrophic ratings and the impending congressional elections, it was 
assumed - mistakenly - that at least in the short term, the White House 
would avoid a frontal confrontation and merely give Europeans the wink 
to intensify the pressure and avoid a frontal confrontation.
      
       But the Administration shocked 
Israel by accepting the new PA-Hamas government even before the 
consummation of the union. This was in flagrant breach of former 
undertakings, betraying its long-standing ally by announcing 
disingenuously that it would work with the new PA- Hamas government, as 
long as it “abides by the principles mandated by the US”. Yet, far from 
renouncing terror, Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal boasted that “the 
reconciliation will actually consolidate the resistance… from one of 
intifada to another until the liberation of Palestine”.
      
       The US initiative was clearly 
designed to pave the way for Israel’s further global isolation. It was 
immediately endorsed by the European Union, the United Nations, the UK 
and France and of course China, Russia and India all of whom praised the
 union as an important step towards “Palestinian reconciliation”.
      
       AIPAC, the Conference of 
Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, and other Jewish agencies 
immediately condemned the “charade” stressing that “US law expressly 
prohibits funding to a Palestinian government in which Hamas 
participates”. They urged Congress to conduct a review of assistance to 
the PA and ensure implementation of the law denying support to the PA if
 it cooperated or bonded with Hamas.
      
       There were senior lawmakers – 
Democrats as well as Republicans - who also condemned the move and 
insisted that the Palestinian anti-terror act passed in 2006 
specifically precludes the US government from funding any government in 
which Hamas is involved or exercises influence.
      
       Although there is no certainty 
that Congress will, in the short term, force the White House to back 
down, public opinion unquestionably opposes the Obama policy. Despite 
the hostility generated by the anti-Israeli liberal media, opinion polls
 all indicate record levels of support for Israel amongst the American 
people. The most recent, conducted last month by Paragon Insights on 
behalf of the Israel Project, showed that a 2-1 majority blame the 
Palestinians for the breakdown in negotiations and agrees that Israel 
cannot be expected to deal with a PA which merges with genocidal Hamas 
terrorists.
      
       Over recent months, Congress has
 also displayed a lack of confidence in the Obama administration’s lack 
of accountability and transparency in foreign relations. This has 
created major tensions, particularly amongst Democrats who do not wish 
to be obliged to choose between abandoning their President or supporting
 Israel.
      
       That is the reason why Democrat 
Senator Robert Menendez, head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 
and a powerful supporter of Israel, temporarily withdrew the US Israel 
Strategic Partnership Act from the agenda. He did so out of concern that
 an amendment, introduced by Republican Bob Corker reflecting 
congressional distrust of the president’s handling of nuclear talks with
 Iran and demanding greater accountability, could create major splits in
 the ranks of the Democrats. The bill, which designated Israel as a 
“strategic partner” and had already been passed in the House of 
Representatives by 410 to 1 majority, was designed to expand US weapons 
stockpiles in Israel and extend areas of joint US Israel collaboration 
in areas such as energy, water and homeland security.
      
       Ultimately a compromise will be 
found, but this behavior reflects the turmoil - even amongst President 
Obama’s Democratic supporters - concerning the administration’s 
appeasement of the Iranians and pressure against Israel.
      
       In the meantime, the House of 
Representatives passed the National Defense Authorization Act which 
included major boosts for Israel’s missile-defense programs as well as 
sections highlighting concern about negotiations with the Iranians and 
was carried on a bipartisan majority of 325 to 98.
      
       It is indicative of the 
direction in which the wind is blowing when potential presidential 
candidate Hillary Clinton, in her new memoir, signals her disapproval of
 President Obama’s policies when referring to the “tactical error” in 
trying to “enforce a hardline on settlements”. She also criticized 
Obama’ Iranian policy, telling a gathering of the American Jewish 
Committee: “I personally am skeptical that the Iranians will follow 
through and deliver… No deal is better than a bad deal”.
      
       After the November midterm 
elections, the president will increasingly become a lame-duck and with 
the onset of primaries and campaigning for the next presidential 
election, there is every probability that the Senate and Congress will 
act against Obama if he makes further excessive demands on Israel or 
totally capitulated to the Iranians. However, it should be noted that, 
despite the Obama administration’s harsh political behavior towards 
Israel, it has in fact strengthened the crucial US-Israel defense 
relationship.
      
       Israel must weather the 
remainder of Obama’s presidential term, diplomatically balancing 
resistance to the negative pressures without severing its crucial 
relationship with the US. It should simultaneously seek to further 
strengthen the public support it currently enjoys amongst the American 
people and throughout Congress.
      
       The writer’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com.       
       This column was originally published in the Jerusalem Post and Israel HayomIsi Leibler may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com
Source: http://wordfromjerusalem.com/?p=5120
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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