Just happened to see the item in today's news and thought it might be  
interesting
to our illustrious group. It confirms, as if there was serious doubt, that  
the
message of the US political Left resonates among Muslims. Also gives
fresh insights into political perceptions in Israel.
 
What if the rest of the world could vote in our elections ?
 
Sobering thought.
 
Billy
 
==========================================================
 
message dated 10/24/2010 , [email protected] writes:

Well, aren't you Mr. Sunshine today?? :-( 

David

  _     
 
To  compel a man to subsidize with his taxes the propagation of ideas which 
he  disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical.--Thomas  Jefferson 



On  10/24/2010 3:21 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   wrote:  


 
Analysis:  Israelis, Palestinians eye US midterm elections 
By _ASSOCIATED PRESS_ (mailto:[email protected])    
10/24/2010  14:43 

There is a  foreboding sense in Israel that punishment is on the way — 
especially if  Obama emerges from the midterms unscathed. 

 
 
Israelis and Palestinians were closely watching next month's US  midterm 
race amid a sense — rarely discussed openly but very much on  people's minds —
 that the result could affect the US-led peace effort, and  US President 
Barack Obama's ability to coax concessions from  Israel.

Animating the discussion is the startling fact that the  United States has 
failed, despite emphatic public appeals by Obama and weeks  of increasingly 
frustrating diplomacy, to persuade Israel to extend the  settlement-building 
slowdown that expired on September 26.


That  caused Palestinians to, in effect, suspend the US-brokered peace 
talks just  weeks after they began.

The Palestinians are now hoping that Obama  has reacted mildly to Israel's 
rejection because of political considerations  ahead of the November 2 vote —
 and might be freer to apply pressure after  the elections.

"We think that if _President  Obama_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Barack_Obama)  emerges strong from this 
election, then this will  enable him to 
work more on foreign policy," Palestinian Authority negotiator  Nabil 
Sha'ath told The Associated Press. "If he and his party lose in the  elections, 
then this will limit his ability to pressure and actively engage  in foreign 
policy. This is the problem."

Although Israeli officials  avoid discussing the topic publicly for fear of 
alienating its most  important ally, there is a foreboding sense in Israel 
that punishment is on  the way — especially if Obama emerges unscathed.

Nahum Barnea, a  respected and widely-read columnist, put it this way in 
Friday's Yediot Ahronot: "The problem is the  disgust and rage that the 
Israeli refusal sparked in the administration — a  rage that is being 
suppressed 
at the moment, but which will erupt in full  force on November 3, after the 
elections to Congress. The Americans are  seeking the logic behind the 
refusal ... and are finding  nothing."

But if recent polls are proved accurate and Republicans  take one or both 
houses of Congress, a chastened president might be too busy  or weakened to 
pressure Jerusalem much, the thinking goes.

If  Congress tilts Republican it could have a "positive impact" on Israeli  
concerns, one adviser to Prime Minister _Binyamin  Netanyahu_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Benjamin_Netanyahu)  told The AP — an 
allusion to 
avoiding pressure  for concessions. With the Democrats weakened, Israel's 
friends in Congress —  both Democrat and Republican — "would be able to have a 
stronger voice if  the administration should embark on a policy that is less 
favorable to  Israel," he added.

US foreign policy is set by the White House, not  Congress. But Congress 
can influence it in the course of the day-to-day  political horse trading that 
goes on between the executive and legislative  branches.

For example, when Republicans controlled the House of  Representatives 
during Netanyahu's first term in the late 1990s, the prime  minister was able 
to 
marshal the support of the party's conservative wing in  a face-off with 
then US President Bill Clinton over stepped-up settlement  construction and 
Israeli troop pullbacks in the West  Bank.

Traditionally, both branches have been bastions of support for  Israel no 
matter which party is in charge. But conservative Republican  legislators 
tend to be less critical of Israel's contentious settlement  policy and more 
hawkish — and therefore supportive — on the security issues  that are 
uppermost in Israel's mind.

The Israeli government has had,  at best, uneasy relations with Obama 
himself.

Obama took office in  early 2009 promising bold changes in American policy 
in the Middle East and  in one of his first official acts appointed a 
Mideast peace envoy.

He  soon traveled to Egypt, the heart of the Arab world, in a high-profile  
gesture to Muslims. The speech included a condemnation of Israeli  
settlements, winning over Palestinians while alarming the Israeli  government.

Tensions peaked in March over Israel's approval of a  major construction 
plan in east Jerusalem during a visit by US _Vice President Joe  Biden_ 
(http://newstopics.jpost.com/topic/Joe_Biden) . The move infuriated Biden, and 
Obama later  publicly snubbed Netanyahu during a White House meeting. Although 
relations  have mended, Mideast peace talks launched by Obama in early 
September are at  an impasse over renewed settlement construction.

In the United  States, foreign policy has barely registered on the radar 
screen in the  run-up to the election. Blamed by many for the still-struggling 
economy and  unemployment hovering around 10 percent, the Democrats find 
their majority  at risk, especially in the House of Representatives, where all 
435 seats are  on the ballot.

Republicans could also make significant gains against  the Democrat 
majority in the Senate, where 37 of 100 seats are up for  grabs.

David Makovsky, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for  Near East 
Policy, said a hypothetical Republican majority could be a  "profound 
constraint" on Obama's ability to push Israel to make concessions  for a peace 
deal. 
But he also said such thinking could backfire: "It's  possible that the net 
effect of his losing the ability to pass domestic  legislation might make 
him a 100 percent foreign policy president," said  Makovsky, whose think tank 
has good relations with Israel.

Some in  Israel have expressed concerns that Obama might put forward his 
own ideas  for peace and try to impose a settlement if negotiations bog  down.

Obama has set the ambitious goal of brokering a final  Israeli-Palestinian 
peace deal by next September — hoping to do what a  string of US presidents 
have failed to do in nearly two decades of  stop-and-start peace efforts.

Obama will not "allow himself to be  constrained by domestic politics if an 
opportunity avails itself," said  Aaron David Miller, a senior former State 
Department official involved in  negotiations. "He's not suicidal — but if 
there were an opportunity, he'd go  for it." 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the  Radical Centrist Community 
_<[email protected]>_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
Google  Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog:  http:

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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