Netanyahu is one of 12 Mid East leaders saying no to Obama 
DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis May 20, 2011, 7:38 PM (GMT+02:00)

http://www.debka.com/dynmedia/photos/2011/05/20/big/Netanyahu_15.5.11.jpg

Binyamin Netanyahu locks horns with Barack Obama

 

By rejecting US President Barack Obama's proposal for Israel and its troops
to pull back from the West Bank to behind the indefensible 1967 lines,
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu lands in the company of eleven
Middle East and North African rulers who spurned Washington's Middle East
policy in the six months of the unfolding Arab uprising. Egypt's Hosni
Mubarak was the only one to keep faith with Obama and he was pushed out for
his pains.




Barack Obama's presentation of his Middle East vision Thursday, May 19 had
three immediate results:

1.  Every surviving regional leader was confirmed in his determination to
keep his distance from US administration policies;

2.  Another nail was driven in the coffin of the stalled Israeli-Palestinian
peace process;
3.  The fuel that was poured on regional tensions increased the prospects of
an Israel-Palestinian or an Israeli-Arab war this year.




No Israeli politician can afford to back away from the demand that Israel
retain a security presence and defensible borders along its eastern boundary
and, even more so, on the West Bank in any future peace accord. This
fundamental principle was not denied by opposition leaders Tzipi Livni and
Shaul Mofaz even as they poured boiling oil on the prime minister's head for
getting into an argument with the US president.
But this repudiation is exactly what Obama wants.

 

The notion that Israel can achieve security through peace talks is a pipe
dream because no Palestinian negotiator will think of seeking fewer
concessions from Israel than the ones laid down by the US president. He will
simply use the speech as a starting-point for the biggest squeeze Israel has
ever faced.
Obama saw this maxim played out in his first two years in office: First, he
said Netanyahu must freeze West Bank settlement construction. The
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas, when he first heard about it, found the
demand absurd - it had never been put to any former prime minister either by
Washington or the Palestinians. But after Obama led the way, Abbas could
demand no less. So he shrugged and turned this demand into a useful pretext
in his maneuvers for wriggling out of talking to Israel.

 

The Israeli Prime Minister after practically begging the Palestinians to sit
down and talk for two years has now put his foot down against the new Obama
proposals. If he stands by this refusal, he leaves the vast region
stretching across the Middle East, the Persian Gulf and North Africa without
a single political, military or royal ruler willing to accept Obama's new
policy principles. The only possible exception may be Turkish Prime Minster
Tayyip Erdogan.




The regional anti-Obama opposition falls into two camps:

The largest consists of eight former American allies, some of them
ex-strategic partners, which is headed by the Saudi royal family.
A leading Saudi spokesman Nawaf Obaid brought the Riyadh-Washington rupture
out in the open for the first time on May 16 in the form of a Washington
Post op-ed.

 "In some issues, such as counterterrorism and efforts to fight money
laundering, the Saudis will continue to be a strong US partner," he wrote.
"In areas in which Saudi national security or strategic interests are at
stake, the kingdom will pursue its own agenda. The oil for security formula
is history. The special relationship may never be the same."

 

Saudi King Abdullah has already swept the half a dozen GCC (Cooperation
Council of the Arab States of the Gulf) behind the separate security and
strategic policies he is pursuing independently of the US and often
diametrically opposed to Obama's course. He has invited Jordan, Morocco and
Yemen to join the group.
The suggestion put by Jordanian monarch Abdullah II to Obama this week that
the US transfer its sponsorship of the Israel-Palestinian issue to the GCC
underscored the rising power of the new Gulf grouping and was firmly
rejected.




The second camp consists of four anti-US Arab rulers, Syria's Bashar Assad,
the Libyan Muammar Qaddaf, President Ali Abdullah Saleh of Yemen and King
Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa of Bahrain, who have resorted to armed violence to
suppress the pro-democracy movements sponsored by President Obama.
Saudi Arabia is propping the Bahraini and Yemen regimes up with cash, arms,
military assistance and intelligence. All four are determined to do whatever
it takes to avoid the fate that befell Hosni Mubarak.
The only leaders who until Thursday, May 19, stood out against joining both
those camps were the military council ruling Egypt and the Palestinian
Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas.




The generals in Cairo nod obediently when faced with demands from Washington
and do nothing.

The Palestinian leader called the Obama speech "disappointing" in that no
timeline or diplomatic mechanisms were offered. The US President poured
scorn on Abbas' plan to seek unilateral UN recognition of Palestinian
statehood in September, hoping to shut the door on yet another ploy for
avoiding peace talks with Israel. The Palestinian leader may well defy him.




Abbas, even after losing his key patron Mubarak, is still juggling several
balls in the hope of pushing Israel into a corner.  Netanyahu, for his part,
having stayed passive in the face of the new currents blowing in from
Washington and the Arab revolt, has reached crunch time with the US
president without strong cards.

A falling-out between the White House and the Israeli prime minister will
also box Abbas into a choice of which anti-Obama Arab camp to jump into -
the group led by Saudi Arabia or the Syrian group which also includes Hamas
with whom he has just signed a unity pact.

 

In the long run, that pact may have saddled him with undesirable options.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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