http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/03/21/nice_speech_mr_president_obama_israel

Nice Speech, Mr. President
Obama said all the right things in Jerusalem. Now what?
BY DANIEL LEVY | MARCH 21, 2013

Something odd happened during Wednesday's press conference between
Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu. When asked to address the
Palestinian issue, the U.S. president on three occasions said that he
would have more to say when he spoke directly to the Israeli people.
The apparent takeaway is that for Obama, spending (wasting?) too much
time trying to make progress with the Israeli prime minister on the
Palestinian question is an exercise in futility -- a recognition that
the politics would have to change first and that the Israeli public
would be key to any political shift.

When Obama finally did get around to addressing that Israeli public in
Thursday's speech in Jerusalem, the president made the point
unequivocally: "Political leaders will not take risks if the people do
not demand that they do. You must create the change that you want to
see." Some might say Obama was following his own domestic playbook, as
he has on issues from taxes to budget cuts to gun control. It's as if
he sees Bibi as an obstacle to change on par with the House
Republicans or the Tea Party.

Obama made his appeal to the Israeli public in an interesting way. He
hit all the buttons in endorsing Israel's own narrative -- as one
would expect from a visit that has resembled a schmooze-a-thon -- but
he added a surprising twist. Obama essentially offered Israelis a
blank check while attaching a health warning: "Use with Caution."

If misused, like a kid inheriting a fortune, such blank checks can
have devastating self-destructive consequences. Obama's basic message
-- Israel has America's unconditional support in perpetuity -- could
be interpreted as having told Israelis that even as you abandon
recognizable democracy in favour of apartheid, the United States will
still have your back. "Israel is the most powerful country in this
region. Israel has the unshakeable support of the most powerful
country in the world," he noted.

Having handed over the blank check, he added the advisory note to
user: If used badly, all that support would still not be enough to
save Israel from the inevitable fallout from its current path.

First, over time you will have less security, as the other side is
catching up technologically.

Second, you will not realize your full economic potential (Obama made
a smart pivot from his visit highlighting Israel's technology
hot-houses to telling Israelis they were nonetheless underachieving
because absent peace and security they could not become a true
regional hub and global magnet).

Third, that while the United States will support Israel no matter
what, the rest of the world will not, and you will become isolated.

Finally, you will ultimately feel bad about yourselves because you
will not be a democracy. You will not live up to your own traditions,
your own standards, and your own humanity (a demographic and moral
argument). In this respect, Obama's powerful message that peace is
also about justice and his humanizing of the Palestinians, including
his off-the-cuff anecdote about meeting young people in Ramallah,
really tried to drive home this point.

Obama's speech may have abandoned objectivity and made for uneasy
listening for any Palestinian or even neutral observer, but he
nonetheless made a powerful case to his mainstream, Zionist audience.
It is a case Israelis seldom hear, even from their own supposedly
liberal politicians.

Obama couched his peace argument in support of a two-state deal on
three axes: that it is necessary, just, and possible. He was on
familiar terrain when making his first point -- having made most of
the arguments in his AIPAC speech of May 22nd 2011, on the challenges
of demography, security, and looming diplomatic isolation. The second
and third arguments he made on the case for peace constituted Obama's
new pitch to the Israeli public. He appealed to morality (it's just)
and to hope (it's possible) -- precisely the themes that have been
missing from the internal Israeli debate for many years. Many
politicians (albeit not Netanyahu or most of his ministers) make the
necessity argument, but almost none including the centrist leader Yair
Lapid and opposition Labor leader Shelly Yachimovitch dare make the
argument that peace is a just and possible path.

So far so good, Mr. President. Great speech, but what next? The visit
has offered nothing new on the programmatic side, no plan for going
forward. My hunch is that Obama knows that putting Netanyahu and
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas back in a room together
will achieve nothing, and that he is in no great hurry or places no
great faith in those talks. Obama will also be very aware that while
Netanyahu repeated his two-state message in their press conference, he
nonetheless did not incorporate that language or anything
approximating it in the coalition guidelines and agreements for his
new government. Less than half of Netanyahu's cabinet is on record
supporting a two-state deal, and many coalition ministers, deputy
ministers, and Knesset members openly advocate the annexation of the
West Bank. Obama presumably also knows that making one speech and then
hoping that the Israeli public will do the rest of the work is not
serious.

If Obama does decide to prioritize a peace deal during his second
term, and that is a big if, an admittedly optimistic take could look
like this: Secretary of State John Kerry might shuttle between the
parties to discuss the parameters and even convene direct or
trilateral talks. He will also court support from Arab states like
Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Obama in his Ramallah press conference with
Abbas seemed to rule out a focus on incremental steps for their own
sake (he might be tempted by the idea of a Palestinian state with
interim borders, but on that too Netanyahu's best offer will fall
short of providing an opening). Progress will be elusive; Netanyahu
will offer little.

Eventually, if Kerry makes a convincing case, the president might
conclude that a moment of choice has arrived and put forward his own
terms of reference for convening an international conference or
something similar. He mentioned his previous parameters during the
Jerusalem speech, which included borders based on the 1967 lines with
mutually agreed swaps. Obama would then draw on the credit accrued
during this visit to appeal directly to the Israeli public in the face
of predictable recalcitrance from Netanyahu. The Israeli center might
be impressed and might even generate a little pressure. Like I said,
optimistic stuff.

And sadly, even this would be insufficient if several other pieces are
not put in place. Key among those is that there will be consequences
for Israel if it chooses rejectionism, if not from the United States
then from Europe and others; that there is a politically empowered
Palestinian side no longer weakened by its current divisions; and that
a detailed and nuanced plan exists for engaging with Israel's myriad
tribal political leaders, including those who were not in the room on
this visit and in whom Obama has yet to take an interest, such as the
Haredi and Palestinian-Arab parties. Big ifs indeed.

Still, nice speech, Mr. President.

Daniel Levy is director of the Middle East and North Africa program at
the European Council on Foreign Relations, based in London. He is also
senior research fellow at the New America Foundation and a board
member of the New Israel Fund.

-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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