Gary Rosenblatt - Between the Lines Blog

How Obama's Plight Is Like Israel's

 
President Obama has been widely criticized of late for appearing weak in his political dealings with the Republicans in Congress.

As a pragmatist by nature, Obama has sought to compromise with his adversaries on various pieces of legislation in an effort to get the country out of its ongoing financial crisis. When he allowed oil and gas companies to keep their tax breaks in passing the debt deal last month, for example, fellow Democrats accused the president of caving. He should have stuck with his principles, many said. They noted that rather than softening the Republicans up for future negotiations through his willingness to work with them, Obama now looks more vulnerable to his adversaries on the right who will just seek more concessions in the future.
Sound familiar?

Ironically, it is the Obama administration that has been pushing Jerusalem for more than two years to make concessions to the Palestinians in the hopes of resuscitating the long-dormant peace negotiations.
When Prime Minister Netanyahu has insisted that it is the Palestinian Authority that is implacable in its refusal to come back to the talks, even after Israel put in place a moratorium on settlement construction, Washington has not been swayed, instead keeping up the pressure.
Recent Mideast history has shown that when Israel makes conciliatory gestures, like unilaterally leaving Lebanon in 2000 and Gaza in 2005, the Arab response has not been gratitude, or compromise. Rather, the result has been violence, and calls for more concessions. The Palestinians interpret Israel’s withdrawals as signs of weakness.
One would think that Obama, reflecting on his struggles with the Republican Congress, would view Netanyahu’s stance vis a vis the Palestinians with more empathy and appreciation now.
One would think.

 

Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)

Comments

The Jewish Week welcomes comments on our stories and encourages discussions germane to our articles. But we will not become a platform for screaming matches or personal attacks against individuals, organizations or religious or political perspectives.

Commenting guidelines:

  • Be clear and stay on topic
  • Avoid objectionable language
  • Be short; comments longer than 300 words will be rejected
  • Be civil; name calling in any form will not be tolerated, and comments that denigrate any religion or Jewish religious stream will always be rejected.
  • Comments meant primarily to advertise a business or organization will be rejected

Instead of 300 billion to gain a 1/4 of a percent in unemployment we should just give him 300 billion to go away. There is blame on Israel, there is blame on the Palestinians. But there is also blame on the WH on how they handled the Middle East and the peace process. Turkey and Israel are close to war, Mubarak was forced to leave, Sinai is a mess. They leave Assad and the Syrians to be gassed and steal Libyan oil, the two state solution is doomed. Now we have to veto it at the UN and face Arab hate.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.