Posted: 26 Mar 2015 12:32 PM PDT
Obama’s two terms
showed us that he was a sore winner. Israel’s election showed us that he is
even more of sore loser. Ever since Netanyahu survived an election that he
was supposed to lose, Obama has been throwing a floor-pounding,
siren-shrieking and high-kicking tantrum over the Jewish State.
Its
latest kick and shriek had White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough sidling
into the toxic atmosphere at the D.C. conference for the anti-Israel lobby
J-Street to berate Netanyahu.
In attendance at the conference were such luminaries as Saeb Erakat, the PLO
negotiator who had called Netanyahu a “filthy war criminal” and claimed that
Hamas is “a political, not a terrorist movement.”
Also featured was Nabila Espanioly of Hadash, formerly the Israeli Communist
Party. Nabila, a former Communist activist who had accused Israel of “State
Terrorism”, told J Street about the need to fight “against fascism and
against racism inside Israel.”
Other notables included Maha Mehanna, who had called Israel’s war against
Hamas a “crime against humanity”, Peter Beinart, who wanted Obama to punish
Israel and freeze the assets of its Minister of the Economy, and Matt Duss,
who once compared Israel’s blockade of Hamas in Gaza to “segregation in the
American South.”
The comparison would have been on the nose if it had been the KKK being
segregated.
Finally there was James Baker, the former Secretary of State and senior
partner for the law firm the Saudis hired to defend themselves against
lawsuits from 9/11 victims, who had famously said, “F___ the Jews. They don’t
vote for us anyway.”
Denis McDonough’s appearance at the J Street hatefest could be taken as,
“F___ the Jews, they’ll vote for us anyway.”
The dead-eyed McDonough threw the rabid anti-Israel audience its red meat by
warning that, “An occupation that has lasted for almost 50 years must end.”
He continued the administration’s pretense of being offended by Netanyahu’s
election rhetoric about the absence of any partner for peace to create a
Palestinian state with, insisting that “We cannot simply pretend that those
comments were never made, or that they don’t raise questions about the Prime
Minister’s commitment to achieving peace through direct negotiations.”
Netanyahu made his commitment to peace clear when he agreed to release 104
terrorists, some of whom had murdered children, as a precondition demanded by
PLO leader Mahmoud Abbas. Abbas sabotaged the Kerry attempt to start
negotiations anyway and Kerry predictably blamed Israel. But that’s part of
the administration’s consistent position that Israel is always wrong.
Obama’s people are still complaining about Netanyahu’s election comments and
his breach of protocol in addressing Congress. But what are Israelis supposed
to make of Obama’s Chief of Staff addressing a conference that featured
apologists for Hamas and supporters of boycotting Israel?
What message does it send when the White House Chief of Staff attacks the
Prime Minister of Israel at an event featuring enemies of Israel? Barack
Obama is certainly no stickler for integrity in election rhetoric.
When he first ran for the White House, he appeared at AIPAC and
vowed that, “Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel, and it must remain
undivided.”
Once in office, Obama berated Israel for building “settlements” in Jerusalem,
one of the oldest cities in the world. Last year his spokesman claimed that
building in Jerusalem would distance Israel from “even its closest allies.”
At AIPAC he had told the audience that, “There is no greater threat to Israel
— or to the peace and stability of the region — than Iran. Now this audience
is made up of both Republicans and Democrats, and the enemies of Israel
should have no doubt that, regardless of party, Americans stand shoulder to
shoulder in our commitment to Israel's security.”
Then he went on to push a deal that would let Iran go nuclear while his
propagandists denounced Republicans opposed to the sellout as “traitors”.
Most recently he had Iran delisted as a terror threat.
Obama’s double standard has been to hold Netanyahu to the most extreme
interpretation of his remarks while giving himself a pass. That same pass is
also good for Iran and the PLO.
The liberal line on the PLO’s Palestinian Authority and the Iranian regime
has been to ignore their rhetoric. No matter how many times the PLO
celebrates the murder of Jews and calls for the destruction of Israel; Obama
never warns that he is “reassessing” his relationship with the terrorist
group.
Iran’s Supreme Leader just said, “Death to America”, but that won’t impact
the negotiations. The White House explained that was “intended for a domestic
political audience”. When Netanyahu says something during an election that
the White House doesn’t like, the fact that it was intended for a domestic
audience doesn’t matter. But when Iran’s leader calls for “Death to America”,
we can just ignore that because it surely doesn’t reflect his deeper feelings
on destroying America.
Terrorist regimes are treated as untrustworthy when it comes to their
rhetoric, but absolutely reliable when they negotiate. The same Ayatollah who
calls for “Death to America” is supposedly lying to his own people, but his
representatives will be absolutely honest when they pledge not to build a
bomb. The Palestinian Authority shouldn’t be paid attention to when it calls
for destroying Israel, but should be relied on when it signs on the dotted
line no matter how many agreements it broke in the past.
When Iran threatens America, it’s just posturing. When the PLO threatens
Israel, it’s empty rhetoric. But when they negotiate, suddenly we can trust
our lives to the word of these “liars”.
Iran and the PLO benefit from the same double standard that Obama does. We’re
not supposed to believe what they say in public, but we’re meant to have
faith that they are honest in private.
Netanyahu however gets whacked with the other side of that standard. The same
political hack who shamelessly told AIPAC that he supports a united Jerusalem
and then even more shamelessly took it back, pretends to be morally outraged
that Netanyahu would slam a PLO state during an election.
Either an uncharacteristically modest Obama thinks that Netanyahu is better
than him, or he’s being a shameless hypocrite. Given his sordid history,
hypocrite is the safest bet.
Obama’s international doubletalk has gotten so bad that John Kerry actually
had to tell the Russians to ignore Obama’s public statements about Russia.
While Obama can’t “pretend” that Netanyahu’s “comments were never made”, the
Russians are supposed to pretend that his comments were never made. The
Israelis are supposed to pretend that Obama never said anything about a
united Jerusalem. So which comments does Obama really mean? Who knows.
Maybe
he could color code them to indicate which of his comments he doesn’t mean,
which of his comments he really doesn’t mean and which of his comments
he only heard about from the media.
Israel isn’t the barrier to a Palestinian state. The PLO and Hamas can’t even
get along long enough to form a state or hold an election. Blaming Netanyahu
for actually addressing these facts is the height of cynicism from an
administration that until recently avoided investing its energies in peace
negotiations because it knew that was a dead end.
Obama doesn’t really believe in a Palestinian state. He’s throwing a two
state tantrum because it gives him a convenient angle of attack against
Netanyahu. The Israeli election was about either forcing out Netanyahu or
isolating him. Having failed at the first, Obama is defaulting back to the
second.
This isn’t about peace. It’s about fighting and winning a political war
against Netanyahu in order to free Obama to secure his nuclear deal with
Iran.
Obama claims that Netanyahu has shown that he is untrustworthy when it comes
to peace. Instead he urges us to trust our lives to an Ayatollah who calls
for “Death to America”, but doesn’t ‘really’ mean it.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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