by Barry Rubin
To
 put it plainly, the press briefing  supposed to indicate how President 
Barack Obama’s thinks about Israel on the eve of his trip here, is a 
combination of fantasy and insult. It may well that the Obama 
Administration did not mean this to be taken seriously, that the 
statements were made for show, to persuade the Arabic-speaking world 
that the United States is striving for peace and using its influence to 
change Israeli policy even as it does nothing of the sort.
Yet
 the premises on which this argument is based can be described as 
believing that what the Arab public really wants is progress toward 
peace with Israel and that the United States sees the ball as being in 
Israel’s–not the Arabs–court. The other is a strange hint that 
Washington has suddenly realized what Israel has understood since the 
beginning–that the “Arab Spring” isn’t going well. Now it feels the need
 to explain to Israeli leaders what they have long known, and give bad 
advice on what to do about it.
To show how mainstream Israelis who follow these issues closely see these themes, let’s quote how the Ynet reporter who covered the briefing–the respected and nonpartisan Yitzhak Benhorin–summarized what Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said. Here’s his lead:
“U.S. President Barack Obama will
 not be bringing a peace plan to Israel, but he will try to convince 
Prime Minister Benjamin and the Israeli public that after the Arab 
Spring, Israel cannot depend on autocrats holding everything together in the region..”
Here’s
 a president arriving at a moment when Israelis think the region is 
falling apart, with old autocrats being replaced by new ones and a more 
hostile environment, and the message is: You shouldn’t be complacent 
that everything is great?
Where
 does this come from? It is the American conception that the “Arab 
Spring” is a great thing, that old autocrats are falling and will be 
replaced by more democratic and moderate regimes. That is American; not 
Israeli thinking.
If that theme is based on fantasy, the second theme is insulting. Here is the second paragraph of Benhorin’s analysis:
“The
 U.S. believes that Israel must show it is serious about its peace 
efforts. It must convince the general Arab public, if nothing more than 
to maintain Israel’s peace treaty with Egypt.”
These are Benhorin’s words, not Rhodes’ exact formulations. But I think Benhorin reads the message properly.
Let’s begin by discussing the idea that Israel must persuade the Arab public:
–The
 question should be posed as this: When will the Arab public, or Arab 
governments, show Israel they are serious about peace? In 2009 when 
Obama sought such assurances and demonstrations he was turned down flat.
 We know it and he should know it.
–How long a list do you want of the times Israel has shown the Arab public that it wants peace seriously?
–Do you think the Arab public cares or is going to be persuaded by any such behavior?
–Hundreds of Israelis died in the 1993-2000 period in the effort to show the Arab public Israel was serious about peace.
The
 idea that Israel needs to persuade its neighbors to accept its 
existence is a line we have heard almost daily since the 1980s or even 
1970s. Yet curiously the Arab street pays no attention to the scores of 
such Israeli gestures and the West soon forgets each one. And indeed 
Obama has forgotten those that took place during his first term, for 
example the nine-month-long settlement construction freeze, just as 
before that were forgotten the Oslo agreement, Israeli withdrawal from 
the Gaza Strip, the 2000 Camp David offer (including the offer to 
redivide Jerusalem!) and many more. [See Footnote, below]
Guess
 what? If today Israel were to make a huge new concession, six months 
from now that would be forgotten in the West, which would also forget 
that there was no considerable Arab response. Israelis know this and so 
saying this kind of thing about Israel proving its decent intentions can
 only fall with a cynical thud. Such statements remind Israelis why they
 are NOT rushing to make new concessions or take new risks.
Note,
 too, that Western and European promises to give Israel a big reward if 
Israel takes a big risk or makes a big concession and the Arab side 
doesn’t respond have also been repeatedly broken.
What
 Obama is in effect saying is “Mr. Netanyahu, tear down that [security, 
counterterrorist] wall.” When he should be saying to the other side: 
“Mr. Abbas, Mursi, et. al., tear down that wall of hatred against 
Israel!”
Of
 course, he won’t do so because that would make the Arab leaders and 
publics mad, not because they want Israel to move faster on peace or 
seek a better deal but because they don’t want peace at all.  And the 
Islamists coming into power have no intention of tearing down the wall. 
In fact, they are building it higher than ever. And there’s 
nothing–absolutely nothing–Israel can do to change the course of events 
in that respect.
Moreover,
 in a context where the same point is not made loudly, clearly, and 
publicly to the Palestinian Authority, the idea that the burden is on 
Israel to prove its peace credentials is a veiled way of Obama 
saying–and signaling to his supporters–that Israel is responsible for 
the failure to achieve peace.
The
 very fact that Obama’s visit is not about seeking to impose peace or 
even to press the issue. But why? The Obama Administration isn’t being 
honest about this. The reason is that the White House knows that such an
 effort will go nowhere. And it also not because of Netanyahu. After 
all, how well did six predecessors do in solving this problem? Yitzhak 
Rabin, Shimon Peres, Ehud Barak, Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert, and Tsipi 
Livni. Even if one can claim they all tried harder than Netanyahu why 
did they all fail?
While
 the ideas on the “peace process” show the problem with U.S. thinking on
 that issue, the idea on the direction being taken by the region shows 
the wider miasma of fantasy that surrounds U.S. policy.
This
 idea that Israel cannot depend on autocracies to maintain the status 
quo parallels Obama’s view for U.S. policy: that to protect the region’s
 stability, the United States must show its desire for good relations 
and the fulfillment of Arab and Muslim dreams by helping force out 
pro-American authoritarian regimes and to substitute for them 
(anti-American) Islamist authoritarian regimes.
Ladies
 and gentlemen, it is not 1980. Does Israel not understand that the 
region is already overwhelmingly ruled by autocracies hostile to itself?
 Here is the list: Egypt, Algeria, Sudan, Lebanon, the Gaza Strip, 
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Iran, in particular. And one can add 
Tunisia and Turkey were elections do mean something.
What
 does Obama intend to convey by this idea? It seems as if he is saying: 
You better act now while the relatively friendly dictator Bashar 
al-Assad is running Syria before the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists 
take power! But that is absurd. How about:  You better act now before we
 pass the window of opportunity of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood 
regime being eager for comprehensive peace with Israel? You better act 
fast before Hamas (which rules the Gaza Strip) and Hizballah (which 
rules Lebanon) change to a more hostile attitude?
What
 better time to make risky concessions than when the security situation 
is deteriorating and the new rulers of your neighbors are baying for 
your blood?
At
 any rate, the old autocrats are already gone for all practical 
purposes. The U.S. idea is an outdated one: Don’t depend on being nice 
to Mubarak because one day he could be overthrown and there will come a 
pharoah who knows not Joseph. Thanks, but that’s already happened and 
you helped bring about that problem.
Thus,
 Israel must prove that it is a nice guy to…the Muslim Brotherhood? The 
nonsense involved is clear when the concept is stated plainly.
In
 Jewish history this concept translates, for example, into saying that 
the Jews shouldn’t put all their eggs in the basket of the Weimar 
Republic because it had just been overthrown by the Nazis, so the Jews 
had to prove to them that they wanted good relations. (I apologize for 
the over-used Nazi reference but it is appropriate to explain the 
situation.)
The
 problem is that the United States is under the illusion that even the 
United States can make friends with Islamist regimes. How all-the-more 
ridiculous is it to claim that Israel can do so by concessions or 
gestures? How can anyone with a straight face suggest that if Israel 
shows progress on negotiations with the Palestinians that regimes which 
have sworn to wipe it off the map will change their minds?
Rhodes
 added that in particular progress on the peace process required that 
Israel show Egypt it should keep the peace treaty by making concessions 
to the Palestinians. Perhaps Egypt should keep the treaty because it is 
an international agreement it is required to keep. Or that it is in 
Egypt’s interests because Israel and the United States would make Cairo 
sorry if it abandoned the treaty completely. Notice that only 
concessions–not toughness, deterrence, or credibility–are a tool to keep
 treaties.
In these circumstances, a phrase often comes to my mind: Just because you are stupid, why should I kill myself?
Yes,
 it is intemperate of me to call these people stupid but they leave me 
no choice. Who does the Egyptian government support among the 
Palestinians? Hamas, despite their recent bickering. So how would 
progress on negotiations with the Palestinian Authority soften Egypt’s 
attitude? Is President Mursi going to say: Wow, that treaty with Israel 
is worthwhile because there is hope of a deal with the Palestinians that
 will ensure a non-Islamist government in Palestine and help to 
guarantee the existence of a Zionist state in the region? Yay!
No.
 He would say that such progress would indicate a betrayal by the PA and
 make it harder for the Islamist cause to flourish. Hence,  any such 
deal must be stopped. Mr. Rhodes, let me explain. It was Mubarak who 
perhaps benefited from an advancing peace process; Mursi hates the idea.
Rhodes continued:
“I
 think there’s an opportunity, frankly, for there to be a deeper source 
of support for peace broadly across the region if there can be 
progress.”
I will give Rhodes the benefit of the doubt by suggesting that he does not believe one word of that sentence.
Again,
 Obama’s trip is not about this issue. Yet by keeping the mythology 
alive about the state of the conflict the Obama Administration does 
another disservice to Israeli interests and American understanding of 
the region.
Oh, and let’s not forget something else.
Rhodes
 didn’t say that the PA, whose leaders Obama will also meet, must show 
Israel that it’s serious about peace. Supposedly, making peace is a 
one-way street in which the burden is always on Israel. Yet Israel’s 
behavior is not due to stubbornness, paranoia, or ideology.
It is based on experience.
Footnotes:
 Of course I am aware that there have been circumstances in which 
specific Arab factors were responsive to Israeli concessions.  To act 
Arab leaders–autocrats or otherwise–must believe they can get away with 
defying Islamists, who will declare anyone wanting to make peace with 
Israel as enemies of Allah. That was most obviously true of Egyptian 
President Anwar Sadat. Mursi’s ideological compatriots killed Sadat. 
That graphically sums up who is on which side and why Rhodes’, and hence
 the Obama Administration’s, formulations are absurd.
  This article is published on PJ media.
Barry Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press.
Source: http://www.gloria-center.org/2013/03/why-president-obamas-concept-of-the-middle-east-will-fail-just-listen-to-it/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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