Weekly Standard
 
 
Obama’s Israel Problem
9:02 AM, Jan 29, 2015 • By _WILLIAM  KRISTOL_ 
(http://www.weeklystandard.com/author/william-kristol) 


 
 
The Obama administration is angry with Israel. Here's the administration's  
house organ, the New York Times, this morning: 
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration, after days of  mounting tension, 
signaled on Wednesday how angry it is with Israel that Prime  Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu accepted Republican leaders’ invitation to address  Congress on 
Iran without consulting the White House. 
The outrage the episode has incited within President  Obama’s inner circle 
became clear in unusually sharp criticism by a senior  administration 
official who said that the Israeli ambassador, Ron Dermer, who  helped 
orchestrate 
the invitation, had repeatedly placed Mr. Netanyahu’s  political fortunes 
above the relationship between Israel and the United  States. 
The official who made the comments to The New York Times  would not be 
named...
Of course, the official who last summer called Prime Minister  Netanyahu a 
"coward" and a "chickens--t" would not be named either. But there is  no 
reason to think those unnamed angry officials do not speak for an angry  
president. 
The Obama White House usually prides itself on not getting  angry. Its 
self-image is that it's cool, calm, and collected. And it doesn't get  angry 
at, 
for example, the Islamic Republic of Iran. The Obama White House  
understands and appreciates the complexities of the Islamic Republic's politics 
 and 
history. It is only with respect to the Jewish state that the Obama White  
House is impatient, peremptory, and angry
 
 
Why has Obama been lashing out? Because he had a dream. He  was to be the 
American president who would preside at, and take credit for, the  founding 
of a Palestinian state. Obama would be to Palestine what Harry Truman  was to 
Israel. Now it's clear that's not going to happen during his presidency.  
Obama's frustrated that it's not going to happen. So he lashes out. 
But Obama is still pursuing another dream: to be the American  president 
who goes to Tehran, who achieves with Iran what Richard Nixon achieved  with 
China. And he thinks Israel, and Israel's friends in the United States,  
stand in the way of achieving that dream. So he has another reason to be  
angry. 
Of course, it's not Israel but reality that stands in the way  of Obama's 
dreams. His Cairo speech, and the policies that followed from it,  have 
crashed on the shoals of reality. Obama said in Cairo in June 2009, that he  
hoped that his administration would end the "cycle of suspicion and discord"  
between the United States and much of the Muslim world: 
I have come here to seek a new beginning between the United  States and 
Muslims around the world; one based upon mutual interest and mutual  respect; 
and one based upon the truth that America and Islam are not  exclusive, and 
need not be in competition. Instead, they overlap, and share  common 
principles – principles of justice and progress; tolerance and the  dignity of 
all 
human beings. ... 
There must be a sustained effort to listen to each other;  to learn from 
each other; to respect one another; and to seek common ground.  As the Holy 
Koran tells us, "Be conscious of God and speak always the  truth."
But the truth is that Obama's policies haven't ameliorated  the crisis in 
Islam or lessened the discord between Islam and the West. They  have worsened 
the discord and exacerbated the crisis. Obama's policies of  retreat have 
strengthened radical Islam, and undermined those in the Muslim  world who do 
believe in "justice and progress; tolerance and the dignity of all  human 
beings." 
It is Obama's failures that explain his anger—his failures,  and his hopes 
that a breakthrough with Iran could erase the memories of failure  and 
appear to vindicate his foreign policy. Israel stands in the way, he thinks,  
of 
this breakthrough. Prime Minister Netanyahu stands in the way. And so Obama  
lashes out. 
It's of course unseemly. But it's also dangerous. Neville  Chamberlain and 
the British establishment were far angrier with Winston  Churchill, and much 
harsher in their attempts to discredit him, in the late  1930s when the 
dreams of appeasement were failing, than earlier, when hope for  the success of 
appeasement was alive. When you think your policies are going to  be 
vindicated, you ignore or dismiss critics. It's when you suspect and fear  
imminent failure that you lash out. 
So we have an angry president, increasingly desperate for  vindication of 
his failed foreign policy, accelerating both his appeasement of  Iran and his 
attacks on Israel. The good news is that the Republican party and  the 
conservative movement—and most of the American people—stand with Israel and  
against President Obama. Of major parts of the American Jewish community, on 
the  other hand, one can say no such thing.

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