Monday, February 9, 2009

Elections have consequences









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Elections Have Consequences


Dear Solsticewitch13 ,


The commentary below is an insightful analysis of how Iran is
responding
to President Obama’s clear signals as to what his Iran
policy will be. One week ago Iran launched a domestically
manufactured satellite on a ballistic missile that has a range of up
to 3,000 kilometers.

In other words, Iran has demonstrated it has the capability to launch
conventional and nuclear warheads with a range of as much as
3,000 kilometers.


During the presidential campaign, at times candidate Barack
Obama
made it clear that a nuclear Iran was “unacceptable.” But these
statements were wrapped in his broader foreign policy theme –
that it was time for the U.S. to change course and diplomatically
engage countries like Iran.


Anyone who even remotely appreciates the horrors of war hopes
that
diplomatic efforts and/or various non-military sanctions will be
successful in “persuading” Iran to abort its nuclear weapons
program.

But let’s be realistic here. There is little evidence that existing
sanctions have had any impact in changing the Iranian government’s
behavior. The Islamist regime continues to move full-speed ahead
toward the acquisition of nuclear weaponry. As Iran moves ever
closer to achieving this goal, will the Obama administration be
willing to do what is necessary to prevent a nuclear Iran, what
Obama has termed “unacceptable”?







February 07, 2009

Israel's Fateful Elections

By Caroline Glick

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2009/02/israels_fateful_elections.html


Tuesday's general elections will officially end the briefest and most nonchalant electoral
season Israel has ever experienced. Regrettably, the importance of these elections is
inversely proportional to their lack of intensity. These are the most fateful elections
Israel has ever had. The events of the past week make this point clearly.

On Monday Iran successfully launched a domestically manufactured satellite on a
ballistic
missile called the Safir-2 space rocket. Since the launch, experts have noted that the
Safir-2 can also be used to launch conventional and nonconventional warheads.
The Safir-2 has an estimated range of 2,000-3,000 kilometers. And so the
successful satellite launch showed that today Iran is capable of launching
missiles not only against Israel, but against southern Europe as well.

Many Israeli leaders viewed Monday's launch as a "gotcha" moment. For
years
they have been saying that Iran's nuclear program is a threat to global
security -
not merely to Israel's. And Monday's launch demonstrated that they were
right
all along. Israel isn't the only country on Iran's target list.


Unfortunately for Israel, the international community couldn't care less. Its
response to Teheran's latest provocation was to collectively shrug its shoulders.
On Wednesday emissaries of the five permanent members of the UN
Security
Council and Germany convened in Wiesbaden, Germany, to discuss their
joint
policies toward Iran in the aftermath of the satellite launch. Some Israelis
argued
that Iran's provocation forced these leaders' hands. Their reputations for
toughness
were on the line. They would have to do something.

Unfortunately for Israel, the emissaries of Russia, Britain, China, France,
Germany
and the US are more interested in convincing the mullahs that they are nice
than
in convincing them that they are tough.

Far from deciding to take concerted action against Iran, the great powers did
nothing more than wish the Obama administration good luck as it moves
to
directly engage the mullahs. As their post-conference press release put it,
the
six governments' answer to Teheran's show of force was to "agree to
consult
on the next steps as the US administration undertakes its [Iranian] policy
review."

As President Barak Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have explained,
the US is reviewing its policy toward Iran in the hopes of finding a way to directly
engage the Iranian government. While they claim that the aim of these sought
after
direct negotiations will be to convince the mullahs to give up their nuclear
weapons
program, since taking office the new administration has sent out strong signals
that
preventing Iran from going nuclear has taken a backseat to simply holding
negotiations with Teheran.

According to a report in Aviation News, last week the US Navy prevented Israel from
seizing an Iranian weapons ship in the Red Sea suspected of carrying illicit munitions
bound for either Gaza or Lebanon. A week and a half ago, the US Navy boarded
the ship in the Gulf of Aden and carried out a cursory inspection. It demurred from
seizing the ship, however, because, as Adm. Michael Mullen, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, explained on January 27, the US believed it had no international
legal right to seize the vessel.

In inspecting the ship the US was operating under UN Security Council
Resolution
1747, which bars Iran from exporting arms. The US argued that it lacked
authority
to seize the ship because 1747 has no enforcement mechanism. Yet the fact of
the
matter is that if the US were truly interested in intercepting the ship and preventing
the arms from arriving at their destination, the language of 1747 is vague enough
to
support such a seizure.

And that's the point. The US was uninterested in seizing the ship because it was
uninterested in provoking a confrontation with Teheran, which it seeks to engage.
It was not due to lack of legal authority that the US reportedly prevented the
Israel
Navy from seizing the ship in the Red Sea, but due to the administration's
fervent
wish to appease the mullahs.

Today the ship, which was sailing under a Cypriot flag, is docked in the Port of
Limassol. Cypriot authorities have reportedly inspected the ship twice, have
communicated their findings to the Security Council, and are still waiting for
guidance on how to deal with the ship.

ALL OF this brings us back to next Tuesday's elections. With the US effectively
giving up on confronting Iran, the entire burden for blocking Iran's quest for
nuclear
weapons falls on Israel's shoulders.

This means that the most important question that Israeli voters must ask ourselves
between now and Tuesday is which leader and which party are most capable
of
achieving this vital goal?

All we need to do to answer this question is to check what our leaders have done in
recent years to bring attention to the Iranian threat and to build coalitions
to
contend with it.

In late 2006, citing the Iranian nuclear menace, Israel Beiteinu leader Avigdor
Lieberman joined the Olmert government where he received the tailor-made title
of strategic affairs minister. At the time Lieberman joined the cabinet, the
public
outcry against the government for its failure to lead Israel to victory in the
war with
Iran's Lebanese proxy Hizbullah had reached a fever pitch. The smell of
new
elections was in the air as members of Knesset from all parties came under
enormous public pressure to vote no confidence in the government.

By joining the government when he did, Lieberman single-handedly kept
the
Olmert government in power. Explaining his move, Lieberman claimed that
the
danger emanating from Iran's nuclear program was so great that Israel could
not afford new elections.

But what did he accomplish by saving the government by taking that job? The
short answer is nothing. Not only did his presence in the government make
no
impact on Israel's effectiveness in dealing with Iran, it prolonged the lifespan
of
a government that had no interest in forming a strategy for contending with
Iran
by two years.

In light of this fact, perhaps more than any other Israeli politician, Lieberman is to
blame for the fact that Israel finds itself today with no allies in its hour of greatest
peril. Had he allowed the people to elect more competent leaders in the fall of
2006,
we might have been able to take advantage of the waning years of the
Bush
administration to convince the US to work with us against Iran.

Then there is Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni. If Lieberman was the chief enabler of
Israel's incompetent bungling of the Iranian threat, as Israel's chief diplomat, it
is
Livni - together with Prime Minister Ehud Olmert - who deserves the greatest
condemnation for that bungling.
Throughout her tenure as foreign minister and still today as Kadima's candidate
for prime minister, Livni claims that she supports using diplomacy to prevent
Iran
from acquiring nuclear weapons. But in her three years as Israel's top
diplomat,
Livni never launched any diplomatic initiative aimed at achieving this goal. In
fact,
she has never even publicly criticized the European and American attempts
to
appease the mullahs.

Livni has remained silent for three years even though it has been clear for five years
that the West's attempts to cut a deal with Teheran serve no purpose other than
to
provide the Iranians time to develop their nuclear arsenal. She has played
along
with the Americans and the Europeans and cheered them on as they passed
toothless resolutions against Iran in the Security Council which - as the Iranian
weapons ship docked in Cyprus shows - they never had the slightest
intention of enforcing.

As for Defense Minister Ehud Barak, as a member of the Olmert government,
his main personal failure has been his inability to convince the Pentagon to
approve
Israel's requests to purchase refueling jets and bunker buster bomb kits, and
to
permit Israeli jets to fly over Iraqi airspace. To achieve these aims, Barak
could
have turned to Israel's friends in the US military and in Congress. But he did
no
such thing. And now, moving into the Obama administration, Israel finds
itself
with fewer and fewer allies in Washington's security community.
For the past several years, only one political leader in Israel has had the
foresight
and wisdom to both understand the dangers of Iran's nuclear program and
to
understand the basis for an Israeli diplomatic approach to contending with the
threat that can serve the country's purposes regardless of whether or not at
the
end of the day, Israel is compelled to act alone.

In 2006, Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu took it upon himself to engage the
American people in a discussion of the danger Iran poses not only to Israel
but
to the world as a whole. In late 2006, he began meeting with key US
governors
and state politicians to convince them to divest their state employees'
pension
funds from companies that do business with Iran. This initiative and
complementary
efforts by the Washington-based Center for Security Policy
convinced dozens of state legislatures to pass laws divesting their pension funds
from companies that do business with Iran.

Netanyahu also strongly backed the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs' initiative to
indict Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as an international war
criminal
for inciting genocide. Both the divestment campaign and the campaign
against
Ahmadinejad have been Israel's most successful public diplomacy
efforts in
contending with Iran. More than anything done by the government,
these
initiatives made Americans aware of the Iranian nuclear threat and
so
forced the issue onto the agendas of all the presidential candidates.

Instead of supporting Netanyahu's efforts, Livni, Barak and
Lieberman have
disparaged them or ignored them. Because he is the only
leader who has done anything significant to fight Iran's
nuclear
program, Netanyahu is the only national leader who has the
international
credibility to be believed when he says - as he did this week -
that Israel will
not allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. Likud under
Netanyahu is the only party that has consistently drawn the connection between
Iran, its Palestinian, Lebanese, Iraqi and Afghan terror proxies, its Syrian client state
and its nuclear
weapons program, and made fighting this axis the guiding principle of its
national
security strategy.

GIVEN THE US-led international community's decision not to prevent Iran from
acquiring nuclear weapons, it is clear that in the coming months Israel will need to
do two things. It will need to put the nations of the world on notice that they
cannot
expect us to stand by idly as they welcome Iran into the nuclear club. And Israel
will
need to prepare plans to strike Iran's nuclear installations without America's
support. More than ever before, Israel requires leaders who understand the gravity of the
hour and are capable of acting swiftly and wisely to safeguard our country from
destruction.

Only Netanyahu and Likud have a credible track record on this subject.

For the sake of our country, our nation and our posterity, it is our responsibility to
consider this fact when we enter the voting booths on Tuesday.



-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


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