by Isi Leibler
|  | 
       Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu’s response to the intensifying global pressures on Israel is 
to firmly reject any further territorial withdrawals that would put 
Israel’s security at risk, stating that “Israel will not lose hope for 
peace, but neither will it cling to false hope.”
       He was also forthright about his
 intention to continue residential construction in Jerusalem, noting 
that “all previous Israeli governments have done so. … It is also clear 
to the Palestinians that these territories will remain within Israel’s 
borders in any deal.”
       The Obama administration’s 
response to Israel’s confirmation that it would continue to create homes
 in the Jewish neighborhoods of Jerusalem was vindictive, brutal and in 
stark contrast to its deafening silence in relation to Palestinian 
incitement.
       The State Department went so far
 as to accuse Israel of acting “illegally,” and in a manner 
“incompatible with the pursuit of peace”.
       In an interview with American 
journalist Jeffery Goldberg published in The Atlantic, a senior US 
official referred to Prime Minister Netanyahu as “chickenshit” and 
described him as “the foreign leader who seems to frustrate the White 
House and the State Department the most”. More than Assad, Erdogan, the 
Iranian Ayatollah and Putin the ‘peace loving’ Abbas?
       The curtain drop to the 
administration’s malice was displayed last week in the Ya’alon 
imbroglio. In a private conversation earlier this year, Defense Minister
 Moshe Ya’alon disparaged Secretary of State John Kerry’s behavior in 
relation to the peace process as “obsessive” and “messianic.” He made 
his remarks when Kerry was repeatedly making provocative statements 
against Israel and then retracting them.
       As defense minister, Ya’alon is 
limited in what he can say publicly and the fact that he spoke 
off-record is irrelevant if he was subsequently quoted. But he 
apologized and reiterated the importance of the U.S.-Israel 
relationship. Nevertheless, the White House inflated his unofficial 
remark totally out of proportion.
       To invoke such a vendetta 
against the defense minister of its most important regional ally, months
 after the event, exposes the pettiness of the Obama administration. 
That Ya’alon was denied access to Vice President Joe Biden and National 
Security Adviser Susan Rice is problematic. But that this was leaked by 
State Department sources at the end of his visit was odious. To make 
matters even worse, the information was leaked to the Israeli daily 
newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, whose publisher is engaged in a 
long-standing crusade to demonize Netanyahu and his government and which
 was the source that had initially released Ya’alon’s off-the-record 
comments.
       Clearly, the White House 
regarded this as an opportunity to undermine not only Ya’alon’s 
standing, but the entire Netanyahu government.
       This is just the latest in a 
series of vindictive incidents by the Obama administration because 
Israel has dared to reject its diktats. Nothing illustrates President 
Barack Obama’s contemptuous attitude toward Israel more than his 
directive to withhold arms to Israel during wartime because Israel had 
rejected Kerry’s initiative to engage Qatar as the mediator to end the 
Gaza hostilities.
       As virtually every foreign 
policy initiative by Obama has proven to be disastrous, his 
recommendations or directives must be viewed with skepticism. After all,
 it is we who will have to live with the consequences.
       This administration adamantly 
insists that the Israel-Palestine status quo is untenable. Yet it 
remains silent as Hamas boasts of efforts to restore its terror tunnel 
network; barely reacts to the mayhem in Syria and Iraq where close to a 
quarter million people have been butchered; ignores the Qatari funding 
of Hamas and other terrorist entities including the Islamic State; fails
 to castigate Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for enabling 
jihadists to traverse Turkey’s territory in order to fight in Syria, 
while standing by and allowing the massacre of the Kurds on his border.
       Palestinian Authority President 
Mahmoud Abbas humiliated the U.S. administration by merging with Hamas 
without prior consultation. But the U.S. failed to criticize this move, 
has not responded to Abbas’ policy of ethnic cleansing by making any 
future Palestinian state Judenrein, nor condemned him for executing any 
Palestinian found selling land to an Israeli. The U.S. did not reprimand
 him for failing to denounce the act of terror in which a baby and a 
young woman were killed last week in Jerusalem. Yet when an Arab 
teenager was shot to death while hurling potentially lethal Molotov 
cocktails at Israeli automobiles, the U.S. immediately conveyed its 
condolences to the family and urged Israelis to initiate an 
investigation.
       Israel, the principal regional 
ally of the U.S., is the only country consistently facing criticism and 
has become the punching bag for the inept Obama administration, even 
being denunciated for opposing a nuclear agreement with the Islamic 
Republic of Iran. Only recently, Kerry again conveyed to an Arab 
audience the absurd allegation that the Arab-Israel conflict fanned ISIS
 and Islamic extremism. Yet the U.S. assiduously avoids condemning or 
responding to rogue states guilty of criminal bloodletting, out of fear 
of being further humiliated and exposed as lacking leadership.
       It should be noted that there is
 a broad consensus throughout Israel that the government is justified in
 resisting efforts by the U.S. and others to restrict construction in 
its capital Jerusalem and the major settlement blocs – which were never 
challenged prior to the Obama administration.
       There are those who question the
 wisdom of such an announcement at this time, but if there is one issue 
for which we should stand united and maintain our rights, it is 
construction in Jerusalem, whose development must not be dependent on 
endorsement from other countries.
       The administration’s efforts to 
demean Israel’s leaders have always been counterproductive. Despite the 
initial media frenzy, Israelis have in such circumstances responded by 
rallying in support of their government. And yet, now when the house of 
Israel should display unity, some of our politicians are behaving 
irresponsibly.
       Finance Minister Yair Lapid’s 
and Justice Minister Tzipi Livni public response to the recent pathetic 
and mean attempt to humiliate Ya’alon implying that the fault for the 
breakdown in relations rests with Israel rather than with a bumbling and
 spiteful U.S. administration were highly inappropriate. They promote 
chaos and bring shame upon themselves and the government they purport to
 represent, conveying the mistaken impression that Israel suffers from 
battered wife syndrome.
       It is also regrettable that, in 
the face of a vindictive U.S. administration, Opposition Leader Isaac 
Herzog, failed to suspend political infighting and accused Netanyahu of 
being “personally responsible for the destruction of relations with the 
U.S.” He could have gained respect by stating unequivocally that there 
cannot be any limits on construction in the Jewish suburbs of Jerusalem.
       Yes, there is constant tension 
and endless recriminations bouncing between the U.S. administration and 
Israel. And according to Goldberg, there is now even the threat that the
 US “may actually withdraw diplomatic cover for Israel at the United 
Nations”.
       The government has made every 
effort to avoid aggravating the situation but Israel is a sovereign 
democratic nation and there are occasions when it must reject 
unrealistic or dangerous demands from the U.S.
       Netanyahu should be commended 
for his extraordinary diplomatic balancing act in withstanding the 
unreasonable pressure from Obama and Kerry, avoiding outright 
confrontations and in so doing, retaining the support of American public
 opinion and Congress.
       Israel is a small country and 
its people are aware that the U.S. is crucial to their survival. But 
does that oblige us to forfeit our self-respect or sovereignty and fawn 
toward an administration that repeatedly displays its contempt and 
humiliates us?
       We should display unity by 
supporting our prime minister’s policy of rejecting further territorial 
concessions until the Palestinian leaders separate from Hamas, engage in
 negotiations and display flexibility to enable us to achieve our 
security requirements. We will not be denied the right to construct 
homes in our capital or in the major settlement blocs, which will remain
 within Israel. We seek the support of the United States but we must 
retain our sovereignty.
      
       Isi Leibler’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com.
Source: http://wordfromjerusalem.com/Obama-Seeks-Confrontation-with-Israel
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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