http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0511/glick052711.php3

 

May 27, 2011 / 23 Iyar, 5771 

The lessons of Netanyahu's triumph 

By Caroline B. Glick 


Subversive leaders in democracies do not tell their citizens where they wish
to lead their societies. They hide their goals from their citizens because
they understand that their citizens do not share their goals. Then once they
achieve their unspoken goals, they present their people with a fait accompli
and announce that only they are competent to shepherd their societies
through the radical shift they undertook behind the public's back 

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was hoping to avoid his clash with US
President Barack Obama this past week in Washington. Four days before his
showdown at the White House with the American leader, Netanyahu addressed
the Knesset. His speech was the most dovish he had ever given. In it, he set
out the parameters of the land concessions he is willing to make to the
Palestinians, in the event they ever decide that they are interested in
negotiating a final peace. 

Among other things, Netanyahu spoke for the first time about "settlement
blocs," and so signaled that he would be willing to evacuate the more
isolated Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria. He also spoke of a long
term military presence in the Jordan Valley rather than Israeli sovereignty
along the militarily vital plain. 

Both strategically and ideologically, Netanyahu's speech constituted a
massive concession to Obama. The premier had good reason to believe that his
speech would preempt any US demand for further Israeli concessions during
his visit to Washington. 

Alas, it was not to be. 

Instead of welcoming Netanyahu's unprecedented concessions, Obama dismissed
them as insufficient as he blindsided Netanyahu on Thursday with his speech
at the State Department. There, just hours before Netanyahu was scheduled to
fly off to meet him in the Oval Office, Obama adopted the Palestinian
negotiating position by calling for Israel to accept that future
negotiations will be based on the indefensible - indeed suicidal - 1949
armistice lines. 

So, just as he was about to board his plane, Netanyahu realized that his
mission in the US capital had changed. His job wasn't to go along to get
along. His job was to stop Obama from driving Israel's relations with the US
off a cliff. 

Netanyahu was no longer going to Washington to explain where Israel will
stand aside. He was going to Washington to explain what Israel stands for.
Obama threw down the gauntlet. Netanyahu needed to pick it up by rallying
both the Israeli people to his side and rallying the American people to
Israel's side. Both goals, he realized could only be accomplished by
presenting his vision of what Israel is and what it stands for. 

And Netanyahu did his job. He did his job brilliantly. 

Israel today is the target of an ever escalating campaign to demonize and
delegitimize it. Just this week we learned that a dozen towns in Scotland
have decided to ban Israeli books from their public libraries. One Scottish
town as decided to post signs calling for its residents to boycott Israeli
products and put a distinguishing mark, (yellow star, perhaps?), on all
Israeli products sold in local stores to warn residents away from them. 

Israelis shake their heads and wonder, what did we do to the Scots? 


In San Francisco, there is a proposition on the ballot for the fall
elections to ban circumcision. The proposition would make it a criminal
offense to carry out the oldest Jewish religious ritual. Offenders will be
punished by up to a year in prison and a fine of up to a thousand dollars. 

Israelis shake their heads and wonder, what did we do to the people of San
Francisco? 

It seems that everywhere we look we are told that we have no right to exist.
>From Ramallah to Gaza, to Egypt, to Scotland, Norway, and San Francisco we
are told that we are evil and had better give up the store. And then Obama
took to the stage on Thursday and told us that we have to surrender our
ability to defend ourselves in order to make room for a Palestinian state
run by terrorists committed to our destruction. 

But then Netanyahu arrived in Washington and said, "Enough already, we've
had quite enough of this dangerous nonsense." 

And we felt things we haven't felt for a long time. We felt empowered. We
felt we had a voice. We felt proud. We felt we had a leader. We felt
relieved. 

The American people, whose overwhelming support for Israel was demonstrated
by their representatives in both houses of the Congress on Tuesday, also
felt empowered, proud and relieved. Because not only did Netanyahu
eloquently remind them of why they stand with Israel, he reminded them of
why everyone who truly loves freedom stands with America. 

It is true that the American lawmakers who interrupted Netanyahu's remarks
dozens of times to applaud wanted to use his presence in their chamber to
send a message of solidarity to the people of Israel. But during the course
of his speech, it became apparent that it wasn't just their desire to show
solidarity that made them stand and applaud so many times. Netanyahu managed
to relieve them as well. 

Since he assumed office, Obama has been travelling the world apologizing for
America's world leadership. He has been lecturing the American people about
the need to subordinate America's national interests to global organizations
like the United Nations which are controlled by dictatorships that despise
them. 

Suddenly, here was an allied leader reminding them of why America is a great
nation that leads the world by right, not by historical coincidence. 

It is not coincidental that many American and Israeli observers have
described Netanyahu's speech as "Churchillian." Winston Churchill's
leadership was a classic example of democratic leadership. And Netanyahu is
Churchill's most fervent pupil. The democratic leadership model requires a
leader to set out his vision of where his country must go and convince the
public to follow him. That is what Churchill did. And that is what Netanyahu
did this week. And like Churchill in June 1940, Netanyahu's success this
week was dazzling. 

Just how dazzling was make clear by a Haaretz poll of the Israeli public
conducted after Netanyahu's speech before the Congress. The poll found that
Netanyahu's approval ratings increased an astounding 13 percent from 38 to
51 percent in one week. Two thirds of the Israelis who watched his speech
said it made them proud. 

As for the US response, the fact that leading Democrats on Capitol Hill,
House Minority Leader Steny Hoyer and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid felt
it necessary to distance themselves from Obama's statements about Israel's
final borders makes clear that Netanyahu successfully rallied the American
public to Israel's side. 

This point was also brought home with Democratic National Committee
Chairwoman Cong. Debbie Wasserman Schultz's interesting request to
Republicans during their joint meeting with Netanyahu. In front of the
Israeli leader, Wasserman Schultz asked her Republican counterparts not to
use support for Israel as a campaign issue. Her request makes clear that
following Netanyahu's brilliant triumph in Washington, Democrats realize
that the President's poor treatment of Israel is an issue that will harm
them politically if the Republicans decide to make it an issue in next
year's elections. 

While the democratic model of leadership is certainly the model that the
founders of most democratic societies have in mind when they establish their
democratic orders, it is not the only leadership model that guides leaders
in democratic societies. This week, as Netanyahu demonstrated the strength
of the democratic leadership model, two other leadership models were also on
prominent display. The first was demonstrated by Obama. The second was
exhibited by opposition leader Tzipi Livni. 

Obama's leadership model is the model of subversive leadership. Subversive
leaders in democracies do not tell their citizens where they wish to lead
their societies. They hide their goals from their citizens because they
understand that their citizens do not share their goals. Then once they
achieve their unspoken goals, they present their people with a fait accompli
and announce that only they are competent to shepherd their societies
through the radical shift they undertook behind the public's back. 

Prior to Obama, the clearest example of subversive leadership was Shimon
Peres. As foreign minister under the late Yitzhak Rabin, Peres negotiated
his deal with the PLO behind the public's back, and behind Rabin's back --
and against their clear opposition. Then he presented the deal that no one
supported as a fait accompli. 

And as the architect of the deal that put the PLO terror forces on the
outskirts of Israel's major cities, Peres argued that only he could be
trusted to implement the deal he had crafted. Eighteen years and two
thousand Israeli terror victims later, Israel still hasn't figured out how
to extricate itself from his subversive legacy. And he is president. 

Today, Obama recognizes that the American public doesn't share his antipathy
towards Israel, and so as he adopts policies antithetical to Israel's
security, he waxes poetic about his commitment to Israel's security. So far
his policies have led to the near disintegration of Israel's peace with
Egypt, the establishment of a Fatah-Hamas unity government in the
Palestinian Authority, and to Iran's steady, all but unimpeded progress
towards the atom bomb. 

As for Livni, her model is leadership from behind. Although Obama's advisors
claimed that this is his model of leadership, it actually is Livni's model.
A leader who leads from behind is a follower. She sees where her voters are
and she goes there. 

In Livni's case, her supporters are on the Left and their main spokesman is
the media. Both the Left and the media oppose everything that Netanyahu does
and everything he is. And so, as Livni sees things, her job as the head of
the opposition is to give voice to their views. 

As Netanyahu stared Obama down in the Oval Office and reminded Israelis and
Americans alike why we have a special relationship, Livni was telling
audiences in Washington and Israel that Netanyahu is a warmonger who will
lead us to devastation if we don't elect her to replace him soon. With Obama
adopting the Palestinians' negotiating positions and with Fatah embracing
Hamas rather than honestly admitting that all hope for peace is dead for the
duration, Livni said that Netanyahu is leading us to war by defending the
country. 

Netanyahu's extraordinary leadership this week has shown that when used
well, the democratic model of leadership trumps all other models. He also
showed us that he has the capacity to be the leader of our times. 

In the coming weeks and months, the threats to Israel will surely only
increase. And with these escalating threats will come also the escalating
need for strong and certain leadership. 

Netanyahu should realize what his astounding success means for him as well
as for Israel. The people of Israel and our many friends around the world
will continue to stand behind him proudly if he continues to lead us as well
and wonderfully as he did this week. And we will admire him. And we will
thank him. 

 



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