Monday briefs

Liar liar pants on fire: Hillary Clinton says the U.S. will “help shoulder” Israel’s burdens. Really? So how’s that stopping Iran from getting a nuclear bomb coming along? That bad? Shyeah. Here’s the thing, Madame Secretary: Bibi Netanyahu is wise to the world’s lies to Jews. Theodor Hertzl said it: “Do not rely on the help of foreigners, nor on benefactors. And do not expect stones to become soft because benefactors give humiliating donations. A nation that wants to stand upright must rely on itself alone.” Amen v’amen.

Somehow, I doubt this will make him more friendly to Israel: Tony Blair is stranded in Jerusalem due to the shutdown of flights all across Europe by volcanic ash. There’s no truth to the rumor that British newspapers are reporting that he is stranded in some unnamed occupied territory. That’s because I just made it up.

The Iran Manhattan Project is booming along: Perhaps “booming” might not be the right word for it, but, well, hey. When you’re approving three new enrichment sites, developing ICBMs, managing to head off any and all sanctions in your drive to getting a nuclear bomb, well, the only word that easily describes that is “booming.”

Posted in Israel, Media Bias, The One | Comments Off on Monday briefs

Diehl’s blind spot

Jackson Diehl has been focusing democratization in the Arab world. It’s an important issue.

For example Gen. Petraeus in his famous and mischaracterized testimony prepared for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee lists a number of items such as

Ethnic, tribal, and sectarian rivalries. Within certain countries, the politicization of ethnicity, tribal affiliation, and religious sect serves to disrupt the development of national civil institutions and social cohesion, at times to the point of violence. Between countries in the region, such rivalries can heighten political tension and serve as catalysts for conflict and insurgency.

Disputed territories and access to vital resources. Unresolved issues of disputed territorial boundaries and disagreements over the sharing of vital resources, such as water, oil, and natural gas, serve as sources of tension and conflict between and within states in the region.

Uneven economic development and lack of employment opportunities. Despite substantial economic growth rates throughout much of the region over the past few years, significant segments of the population in the region remain economically disenfranchised, under-educated, and without sufficient opportunity. In addition many countries in the region face growing “youth bulges” that will strain their economies’ abilities to produce sufficient employment opportunities. The recent global economic downturn has heightened these problems. Without sustained, broad-based economic development, increased employment opportunities are unlikely given the growing proportions of young people relative to overall populations.

These are all functions of the autocratic nature of the Arab world. Yet somehow it didn’t stop Israel’s critics from pouncing on the general’s one statement about Israel.

But Diehl has a blind spot when it comes to Arab democratization. In his latest column, he promotes the candidacy of Mohammed El-Baradei in his campaign to become President of Egypt.

The Obama administration is pressing ahead on the first two issues, setting impossibly ambitious goals and ignoring the unfavorable conditions. And it has put on a distant back burner the one place where opportunity beckons.

That would be Egypt, the region’s bellwether — where an 81-year-old strongman, Hosni Mubarak, is ailing; where a grass-roots pro-democracy movement has gained hundreds of thousands of supporters; and where a credible reform leader has suddenly appeared, in the form of the Nobel Prize-winning former nuclear inspector Mohamed ElBaradei. The movement he leads is pressing Mubarak to lift an emergency law — imposed 28 years ago — that blocks political organizing and freedom of assembly, and to change the constitution so that next year’s presidential election can be genuinely democratic.

Yes, the same Mohammed El-Baradei who dismissed the risk of Iranian nuclear weapons, claimed that they were a lot further away form weapons technology than the Iranians turned out to be, and calls Israel the greatest threat in the Middle East, is the man who Diehl thinks should be promoted as the future President of Egypt as a first step to containing Iran and solving the Arab-Israeli conflict.

(These views are on display at El Baradei’s Facebook page, last week’s more controversial remarks attributed to him were manufactuted.)

If Diehl wanted to promote democracy for its own sake I wouldn’t have as much of a problem. But El Baradei wouldn’t be a help in either problem Diehl suggests he would. As in other cases, Diehl here refuses to acknowledge the anti-Israel hatred of his “progressive” candidate.

Promoting the Palestinian cause and fomenting hatred of Israel is a regular feature of Arab autocrats. It allows them to pose as liberal or prorgressive by adopting the cause of freedom – even as they deny basic rights to their own citizens. Plus it allows them to pose as democrats as they claim they can’t show more friendliness to Israel because their countries won’t allow them too, as if they achieved their positions through free and fair elections, when, in fact, they would allow their populations to dictate no other policy to them.

If El Baradei were doing anything more than seeking power and wishing to change the despot at the head of Egypt’s government he’d show some sign of of thawing relations with Israel. Like Goldstein of the two minute hate Israel provides a handy rallying point for despots of the Arab world to legitimize their hold on power. I can’t believe that El Baradei desires any change except for who will be holding the reins of power in Egypt.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in Israel Derangement Syndrome, Israeli Double Standard Time | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Happy 62nd birthday, Israel!

Israel celebrates 62 years as a modern nation-state today. But before the Independence Day celebrations, Israelis all over the country come to a complete stop for two minutes to remember those who fell in the service of their country—even before it was officially a country.

Our Memorial Day weekend is a cause for barbecues, shopping, and maybe taking in part of the local parade. We could take a lesson from Israel on how to treat our veterans, I think.

On the other hand, Israelis sure do know how to barbecue. I’m told that as soon as it’s officially Independence Day, the air of the entire nation fills with the smell of roasting foods.

Posted in Holidays, Israel | Tagged | 5 Comments

Now you see bee now you don’t

Funny thing. I think dogwoods in my neighborhood haven’t bloomed as nicely as they have in the past. For one thing it appears that the flowers have been more sparse this year. (Did anyone else notice this?) Also the flowers don’t seem to have stayed in bloom as long as I remember in the past.

As long as I was photographing flowers, I figured I should get the dogwood before I lost my opportunity.

That was about my best dogwood photo this year.

I looked again and I saw:

Wow. The bee wasn’t moving so I got a nice close up. (No I’m not scared of bees. It may be stupidity.)

I tried to get a second shot of the bee but ..

It must have been in bad shape. But if I’m correct it fell off the petal. Can you see the leg still sticking over the top? I looked below – though not too thoroughly – and didn’t see it. I didn’t hear it fly past me. I guess the surprisingly chilly weather today made it difficult for him to get around.

Here are some previous dogwood pictures.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in Miscellaneous | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Spam comment of the year

This comment has got to be about the most awesome spam comment I’ve ever seen:

Willingly I accept. The theme is interesting, I will take part in discussion. Together we can come to a right answer. I am assured.

It’s just so—zen. It almost makes me want to approve it.

Naaaah.

Posted in Site news | 2 Comments

Obama: Order up for Mad Mahmoud

It’s yet another day of antagonist militarism—one might even say unabashed hegemony—in the Islamic Republic of Iran, as Barack Obama likes to call the terrorist state, and this quote of his leaped out at me.

Ahmadinejad also urged the U.S. to stop supporting Israel and to dismantle the American military presence in the Middle East and Afghanistan.

Tehran sees American troops on its doorstep in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Persian Gulf as a threat, and Ahmadinejad reiterated his allegations that the U.S. presence is the source of the region’s instability.

“They have to leave our region, this is not a request, it is an order from the nations of the region. It is the will of the regional nations,” said Ahmadinejad. “If they are interested in helping the security of the region, they have to dismantle their military presence in the region and stop supporting Israel.”

To which I must respond: Dude. He’s doing it as fast as he can.

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Doomed to repeat, in a new form

The editors of the Jerusalem Post write in the New Antisemitism:

But what is a conscientious anti-Semite to do in an age of multiculturalism, when “otherness” is in? Singling out a Jew for being different, ridiculing his exotic traditions – in short, acting like an anti-Semite – is not just unpopular, it is downright unacceptable in the age of political correctness.

The indefatigable anti-Semite will not be deterred, however. If he can no longer attack the Jew for keeping kosher, for wearing distinctive dress, for adhering to Shabbat, a different tack must be taken. The Jew must now be coopted to the evil establishment. He is the rapacious capitalist, the smug acquisitionist; he is part of the neocon Cabal directing US foreign policy in Iraq.

But more than anything, the Jew is the warmongering Israeli. Once derided for his weakness and rootlessness, the Jew, who hoped to put an end to anti-Semitism by establishing his own state, is now singled out for being too aggressive, too militant.

History never ends. It just takes on a new shape. Over and over again.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in Anti-Semitism | Tagged | 3 Comments

Arnold Stang and the Middle East

Barry Rubin has succeeded in using an Arnold Stang analogy while explaining the way power works in the Middle East.

And so, if you’re going to have a superpower protector, the relatively moderate Arab rulers prefer Arnold Schwarzenegger to Arnold Stang (an actor specializing in playing wimps, who made Woody Allen look husky by comparison). They want John Wayne, not Wayne Newton; Humphrey Bogart, not Humpty Dumpty; Indiana Jones, not Joan Rivers. OK, you get the point.

I tip my had to you, Professor Rubin. (Read the whole thing.) And I tip my hat to Arnold Stang, who gave me hundreds of hours of enjoyment when I was a child (and who can be seen in It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, one of my all-time favorite films). By the way, read the column in full. It’s well worth your while.

Posted in Israel, Movies | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Late Caturday evening…

Tomorrow is my second Tiggerversary. So today, we have some recent pictures of the kitties.

First up, Princess Gracie in her typical morning “Worship me” pose. She loves the sun; the sun loves Gracie. Oh, she also luuuurves my office, especially now that she has a cat bed in it.

Gracie in the sun

Next, my goofball on the deck, chasing after a long strand of grass or some such plant. That’s him stretching, and he’s even bigger than he looks. Check out the angle—he was a long way away from the wall while reaching for the toy.

Tig on the deck

Tig is currently searching for food, because I’m not giving him any until tomorrow morning. Suffice to say that he was locked in the bathroom for the good of my carpet for some time this evening, and if his stomach settles enough overnight, he can eat tomorrow morning. He does seem to be okay, though. He was chasing Gracie and mrowring like a lunatic not long ago. His latest mrowr sounds like “mruh-mro.” I can’t believe it, but I think I have a Scooby kitty. Some day I have to try to get those sounds recorded. They never fail to make me laugh, which is, by the way, his job. He does it very well.

There may be more pictures tomorrow. It is, after all, my second Tiggerversary. I do adore my latest doofus.

Posted in Cats | 3 Comments

At least they bothered to convene a kangaroo court

The Washington Post and NY Times both report that Hamas has executed two men. The Post’s headine correctly puts the term ‘Collaborator’ in quotes. Given the lack of due process we really don’t know if the men were gulity as charged or if they were simply inconvenient for one reason or another as noted back in 2003.

The Palestinian Authority, established in 1994, now puts suspected collaborators on trial. But vigilante killings are also still common, and Palestinians have slain more than 70 in the past three years, Mr. Eid said.

An Israeli security official insisted that most of those killed were not informers, and Mr. Eid confirmed that many of the killings were actually score-settlings that are passed off as executions of collaborators.

However both made the same mistake. Here’s the Post:

The killings also came amid persistent tension in Gaza, where the Israeli army is continuing military operations to try to stop rocket fire into Israeli communities. They marked the first time the Hamas government has executed “collaborators” since the movement took control of Gaza in 2007.

Well actually there weren’t the first killing of collaborators by the Hamas government since 2007. During Cast Lead Ethan Bronner and Taghreed el-Khodary of the NY Times reported:

In the fourth-floor orthopedic section, a woman in her late 20s asked a militant to let her see Saleh Hajoj, her 32-year-old husband. She was turned away and left the hospital. Fifteen minutes later, Mr. Hajoj was carried out by young men pretending to transfer him to another ward. As he lay on the stretcher, he was shot in the left side of the head.

Mr. Hajoj, like five others killed at the hospital this way in 24 hours, was accused of collaboration with Israel. He had been in the central prison awaiting trial by Hamas judges; when Israel destroyed the prison on Sunday he and the others were transferred to the hospital. But their trials were short-circuited.

A crowd at the hospital showed no mercy after the shooting, which was widely observed. A man in his 30s mocked a woman expressing horror at the scene.

Given that Shifa served as headquarters for Hamas’s leadership during Cast Lead:

During a cabinet meeting a week ago, Shin Bet chief Yuval Diskin said senior Hamas officials found refuge in the hospital basement because they know Israel would not target it, due to the patients in the upper floors. Palestinian sources told Haaretz that not all the senior Hamas leaders are hiding in one place.

I can’t believe that the uniformed executioners did their dirty work without authorization.

So this week’s executions for “collaboration” were the first since 2007 if you’re only counting executions that were carried out after Hamas actually went to the trouble of first convening kangaroo courts to convict the unfortunates. That’s not to say that there weren’t other executions carried out with the approval of Hamas during the past three years.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas | Tagged | Comments Off on At least they bothered to convene a kangaroo court

Fisking Robert Fisk on Scuds

I normally don’t even bother reading the man whose name became the blogosphere’s first verb (“fisk”), but I was researching a post, and I came across Fisk’s take on Hizballah having Scud missiles. This is what leaped out at me:

These hootings and trumpetings have always had a strong element of hypocrisy about them. The Scuds – even if Hizbollah has them – are as out-of-date as they are notoriously inaccurate. In the 1991 Gulf war, Saddam Hussein’s Scuds caused fewer than a hundred deaths. The more Peres thunders about the danger they represent, the more Hizbollah’s allies in Iran – supposedly trying to build a nuclear weapon – take pride of place in public imagination over the continued and illegal Israeli colonisation of Palestinian land.

Let us take a look at the line in bold. Scuds should not be all that big a deal, he says, because in 1991, when Saddam Hussein fired missiles at Israel because America invaded Iraq, not because Israel was involved in the war in any way, “fewer than a hundred” people died. The actual total is 74. And then there were the other costs of war:

Israel benefited from the destruction of Iraq’s military capability by the United States-led coalition, but the cost was enormous. Even before hostilities broke out, Israel had to revise its defense budget to maintain its forces at a heightened state of alert. The Iraqi missile attacks justified Israel’s prudence in keeping its air force flying round the clock. The war required the defense budget to be increased by more than $500 million. Another $100 million boost was needed for civil defense.

The damage caused by the 39 Iraqi Scud missiles that landed in Tel Aviv and Haifa was extensive. Approximately 3,300 apartments and other buildings were affected in the greater Tel Aviv area. Some 1,150 people who were evacuated had to be housed at a dozen hotels at a cost of $20,000 per night.

But there is always more information behind the story when anti-Israel reporters talk about how low the risks to Israelis really are. Tell that to the 74 people who died. Tell that to the thousands of people whose homes were destroyed or damaged. Tell that to the millions of Israelis sitting in their sealed rooms, wearing gas masks, during a scud missile attack—fearing that chemical weapons might be on the scuds they could hear landing nearby.

Other people are so eager to spend Israeli blood in appeasing the Arab and Muslim world. I imagine that before the state of Israel, these would be the people saying that the pogroms weren’t so bad, because most of the Jews were allowed to flee from the town where they’d lived for centuries, instead of being murdered.

Robert Fisk is concerned only with the myth that Israel is a colonialist, imperialist state, oppressing the poor, poor, pitiful Palestinians and everyone else around. The wars? All Israel’s fault, simply for existing. He is as despicable now as he was eight years ago, when his name was turned into a verb. I can think if another f-verb that can be applied to him.

Posted in Israel, Lebanon | Tagged , , | 11 Comments

Briefly

Israelis go home: Israelis fled the Sinai after a particularly strong warning of terrorist kidnapping cells looking for, well, Israelis to kidnap. Which leads us to:

Gazans go home: Hamas shut down a boatload of tunnels into Egypt. Why? Well, the AP thinks it has something to do with Sinai kidnapping cells looking for, well, Israelis to kidnap. And isn’t this just too-too:

Wednesday’s crackdown comes at a difficult time for the tunnel industry.

Oh, it’s an industry now? But I thought Gaza was starved, blockaded, dying of malnutrition, a giant concentration camp, yadda yadda, etc. etc.

The U.K. says Jerusalem is not in Israel: So does the United States, for that matter. It won’t put Israel on the passports of people who live in Jerusalem. But I digress: The U.K. says Israel is using false advertising by placing the Western Wall of the Temple complex in an ad for Israel. It’s an occupied territory, says the bureaucrats. Eff you, says Meryl. Jerusalem was part of Israel before Britain was a nation.

*Note: Apparently, I forgot to post this two days ago. Waste not, want not.

Posted in Hamas, Israel, News Briefs, Terrorism | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Obama the mythbuster

I think we need to thank President Barack Obama. He’s managed, in the short time he’s been president, to bust a whole lot of myths about Israel and Jews.

Myth Number One: Israel runs American foreign policy. Is there seriously anyone out there who can still hold by this myth after seeing the Obama administration slap down Bibi Netanyahu like he was an errant child? Name the last time you heard about a Secretary of State giving a 43-minute dressing-down to the country that is the boss of her?

Myth Number Two: Going against Israel is the kiss of death for American politicians. Obama is not suffering widespread ill effects from trying to bully Israel into doing what he wants. Hell, most American Jews apparently still think his Israel policy is just fine, in spite of what’s been going on recently.

Myth Number Three: You can’t beat the Israel Lobby. AIPAC and Jewish groups have been noticeably quiet, so much so that even Ed Koch is wondering why. The exception to date: The World Jewish Congress. If the Israel Lobby is so strong, how is it that it won’t go up against The One on Israel?

Myth Number Four: You can’t criticize Israel. You will be silenced. I love this one. The loudest proclaimers of this myth to date have been Jimmy Carter and the enduring duo of Walt & Mearsheimer. All three of them have penned anti-Israel best sellers, and Walt & Mearsheimer managed to turn their anti-Israelism into lucrative careers after the book tour.

And then there’s my favorite:

Myth Number Five: Barack Obama is a friend to Israel. That’s the real knee-slapper. Rashid Khalidi’s bestest bud turns out to be not such a great friend to Israel after all, one who seems pretty willing to throw Israel under the bus to appease the Arab and Muslim world. He’s come a long way from the man who said this:

… my strong commitment to make sure that the bond between the United States and Israel is unbreakable today, unbreakable tomorrow–unbreakable forever. … And as President I will work with you to insure that it is this bond that is strengthened.

That was then. This is now:

When Mr. Obama declared that resolving the long-running Middle East dispute was a “vital national security interest of the United States,” he was highlighting a change that has resulted from a lengthy debate among his top officials over how best to balance support for Israel against other American interests.

This shift, described by administration officials who did not want to be quoted by name when discussing internal discussions, is driving the White House’s urgency to help broker a Middle East peace deal. It increases the likelihood that Mr. Obama, frustrated by the inability of the Israelis and the Palestinians to come to terms, will offer his own proposed parameters for an eventual Palestinian state.

Obama and Israel: Myth BUSTED.

Posted in Israel, The One | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Step back or push ahead

At the end of his news conference the other day, President Obama said:

And I remain committed to being a partner with countries around the world, and in particular hot spots around the world, to see if we can reduce those tensions and ultimately resolve those conflicts. And the Middle East would be a prime example. I think that the need for peace between Israelis and Palestinians and the Arab states remains as critical as ever.

It is a very hard thing to do. And I know that even if we are applying all of our political capital to that issue, the Israeli people through their government, and the Palestinian people through the Palestinian Authority, as well as other Arab states, may say to themselves, we are not prepared to resolve this — these issues — no matter how much pressure the United States brings to bear.

And the truth is, in some of these conflicts the United States can’t impose solutions unless the participants in these conflicts are willing to break out of old patterns of antagonism. I think it was former Secretary of State Jim Baker who said, in the context of Middle East peace, we can’t want it more than they do.

But what we can make sure of is, is that we are constantly present, constantly engaged, and setting out very clearly to both sides our belief that not only is it in the interests of each party to resolve these conflicts but it’s also in the interest of the United States. It is a vital national security interest of the United States to reduce these conflicts because whether we like it or not, we remain a dominant military superpower, and when conflicts break out, one way or another we get pulled into them. And that ends up costing us significantly in terms of both blood and treasure.

So I’m going to keep on at it. But I think on all these issues — nuclear disarmament, nuclear proliferation, Middle East peace — progress is going to be measured not in days, not in weeks. It’s going to take time. And progress will be halting. And sometimes we’ll take one step forward and two steps back, and there will be frustrations. And so it’s not going to run on the typical cable news 24/7 news cycle. But if we’re persistent, and we’ve got the right approach, then over time, I think that we can make progress.

Barry Rubin observed:

Regarding the conflict he said that a solution will take time, “progress will be halting” and at times reversible. This suggests that the administration has learned it isn’t going to make quick success here. And when a U.S. government understands that a big effort isn’t going to yield results, it naturally reduces the effort being made.

What this suggests is that even in the current U.S.-initiated friction with Israel, the president wants to build an image of relative toughness on Israel, for his foreign Muslim and Arab audience, but has low expectations. In this context, the conflict is seen as an irritation to be swept to the sidelines as much as possible so it doesn’t interfere with other issues such as Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan. If this is so, the mini-crisis with Israel is going to fade away in the coming weeks.

On the other hand Helene Cooper and Mark Landler of the New York Times read something much different into the President’s words (via memeorandum):

When Mr. Obama declared that resolving the long-running Middle East dispute was a “vital national security interest of the United States,” he was highlighting a change that has resulted from a lengthy debate among his top officials over how best to balance support for Israel against other American interests.

This shift, described by administration officials who did not want to be quoted by name when discussing internal discussions, is driving the White House’s urgency to help broker a Middle East peace deal. It increases the likelihood that Mr. Obama, frustrated by the inability of the Israelis and the Palestinians to come to terms, will offer his own proposed parameters for an eventual Palestinian state.

Mr. Obama said conflicts like the one in the Middle East ended up “costing us significantly in terms of both blood and treasure” — drawing an explicit link between the Israeli-Palestinian strife and the safety of American soldiers as they battle Islamic extremism and terrorism in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Mr. Obama’s words reverberated through diplomatic circles in large part because they echoed those of Gen. David H. Petraeus, the military commander overseeing America’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In recent Congressional testimony, the general said that the lack of progress in the Middle East created a hostile environment for the United States. He has denied reports that he was suggesting that soldiers were being put in harm’s way by American support for Israel.

What worries me is that the New York Times report cites unnamed administration officials.

In addition Laura Rozen quotes a statement from a member of the American UN delegation expressing similar sentiments.

Once again I quote Melanie Phillips, showing that the view of the administration is backwards:

And everyone knows that the way to stop the Palestinian problem festering – a problem which festers solely because of the refusal of the Palestinians to abjure for ever their existential war against the state of Israel, or even currently to negotiate with Israel – is not to force the Palestinians thus to abjure their belligerency or to negotiate but to force Israel instead to make it easier for them to attack and destroy it.

Or as David Bernstein asks:

What if, just as many prominent Israelis are more or less satisfied with current status quo, the Palestinian leadership is content for now with the Palestinians having “won” the rule of all of Gaza and 70% or so of the West Bank without giving up their claim to the right of return, or, for that matter, their desire for the ultimate destruction of Israel?

Perhaps someone can point me to a statement by a prominent Palestinian political leader to the effect that if the Palestinians were given all of Gaza and the land equivalent of 100% of the West Bank, they would sign a permanent, final peace treaty recognizing Israel as the Jewish state envisioned by U.N. way back when (so long as it guaranteed Arab minority rights), and giving up both the right of return and any future claims on Israeli land. Or even a political poll that shows anything approaching a majority of Palestinians would support this result (as opposed to the more weasily question of “a peace settlement based on the 1967 broders” with no mention of giving up the right of return).

(In answer to his question about that poll see here.)

Israel Matzav has a similar take.

UPDATE: In an e-mail Barry Rubin writes:

I have no respect left for the great majority of the NY Times reporters, who are simply advocating what they want. Whatever you think of the speech, if you are going to analyze it you have to point out that Obama explicitly spoke about why there should not be an imposed settlement. This is simply total propaganda. I would say it most likely that the Times is now campaigning for an imposed settlement.

Here’s not one sentence (which the Times quotes) but two paragraphs to the contrary from the speech:

“I think that the need for peace between Israelis and Palestinians and the Arab states remains as critical as ever. It is a very hard thing to do. And I know that even if we are applying all of our political capital to that issue, the Israeli people through their government, and the Palestinian people through the Palestinian Authority, as well as other Arab states, may say to themselves, we are not prepared to resolve this–these issues–no matter how much pressure the United States brings to bear.

“And the truth is, in some of these conflicts the United States can’t impose solutions unless the participants in these conflicts are willing to break out of old patterns of antagonism. I think it was former Secretary of State Jim Baker who said, in the context of Middle East peace, we can’t want it more than they do.”

Now you can argue that Obama doesn’t tell the truth but why would he go on and on arguing AGAINST a policy which the Times says he is signalling by one sentence in the speech? This is nonsense.

It seems to require a lot of chutzpah to say that the NY Times has lost the ability to analyze U.S. policy. But anyone who has been reading what it’s been saying over the last few years and especially the last year has a lot of evidence for that assertion.

Knowing how Washington works–and reading the article carefully–it seems that someone in the administration who wants an imposed settlement gave them this spin.

In short, despite the President’s acknowledgement that he can’t impose peace there are elements within his administration that want him to and reporters who are willing to act as megaphones for these officials.

Crossposted on Soccer Dad.

Posted in American Scene, Israel, The One | Tagged | Comments Off on Step back or push ahead

Thursday’s news

Gee, I can’t imagine why: 91% of Israelis are opposed to Obama imposing a peace deal on them. I mean, who doesn’t think that a man with no foreign policy experience, coming into a decades-long, complicated problem, should totally be able to just tell each side what they should be doing to solve it? Look at what a great job Obama’s doing on the American economy!

Iceland contributing to global warming: Hey, they’ve got a volcano that’s spewing out so much ash it’s stopped air traffic across Europe. Tell me that’s not going to affect global warming! Not to mention screwing up all those people’s vacations and business trips.

Richard Goldstone banned from his grandson’s bar mitzvah: To be fair, I think it’s the security issue, not that his family doesn’t want him there. Either way, that’s a huge blow—or it would be, if Goldstone were religious. Or if Judaism really meant anything to him. Which, except for the cover that his background gives him to criticize Israel, I don’t think matter at all to him.

Another day, another African killed by Egyptian border guards, another loud silence from the UN and human rights organizations: Yeah, I think I said all I neded there.

“Moderate” Hamas murders “collaborators”: Yeah, it’s Israel that human rights organizations single out. But it’s Hamas that’s killing people for “collaborating” with Israel. If you’re new to this sort of story, “collaboration” is a code word for “This guy effed with someone in Hamas.” (Or Fatah, if they’re being executed in the West Bank.) I would also point out that there is no death penalty in Israel except for convicted Nazis, and the last one of them was hanged decades ago.

Posted in Gaza, Hamas, Israel, News Briefs, World | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments