By Jeff Gates
Barack Obama's recent conduct at
the U.N. removed all remaining doubt as to Israeli influence inside this latest
U.S. presidency. When he uttered the phrase "the Jewish state of Israel," he
provided precisely the provocation required to ensure that peace in the Middle
East will continue to be deferred.
When, in May 1948,
Christian-Zionist Harry Truman agreed to recognize an enclave of Jewish-Zionist
extremists as a nation state, he struck out "Jewish state" and wrote the "state
of Israel." Despite assurances from Zionist lobbyist Chaim Weizmann that Israel
would be a democracy, Truman feared the Zionist state might become what it
became: a racist theocracy committed to an expansionist agenda that endangers
U.S. interests in the region.
Barack Obama is a political
product of Chicago's West Side Jewish community and the nation's "first Jewish
president" according to former Clinton White House counsel Abner Mikva. Though
branded an agent of change, when the zeitgeist of his campaign suggested that
change might encompass a shift in the U.S.-Israeli relationship, those
Ashkenazim who produced this presidential phenomenon let their displeasure be
known.
The candidate of change quickly
made the requisite rounds of pro-Israeli venues where he promised his
benefactors there would be no change in an entangled alliance that, in
retrospect, is the primary reason the U.S. finds itself at war in the Middle
East. His U.N. performance thrilled those colonial Zionists whose duplicity
troubled Truman. Meanwhile his "Jewish state" comment was guaranteed to inflame
tensions in the region.
In the lead-up to this speech,
Israelis told Obama what they intended to do-and then did it. Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu announced that he would use agreed-to terms of the Road Map
to trade for stronger action against Iran. When Obama blinked and failed to
insist that Israel comply with the agreed-to freeze on settlements, Netanyahu
got what he sought-an emphasis on war with Iran rather than peace with the
Palestinians.
Rather than announcing progress
in negotiations, Obama announced only his hope that negotiations could soon
resume-maybe. When Tel Aviv saw how easily they outwitted this novice
negotiator, their agenda became more audacious. Obama's mention of the code
phrase "Jewish state" confirmed the ongoing role of the same stage managers who
flew him directly from his speech in Cairo to a photo-op at Germany's Buchenwald
death camp.
Confirming the Zionists' insider
influence, Rahm Emanuel, widely described as the most powerful Chief of Staff in
decades, assumed a prominent position in the U.N. chamber alongside the
Secretary of State, the U.N. Ambassador and the National Security Adviser.
As with Cairo, Obama not only
missed another opportunity to build goodwill, he missed a chance to restore the
tattered credibility of the U.S after eight years of a Christian-Zionist
president. Instead of progress toward peace, he offered yet another photo-op
featuring Israeli and Palestinian leaders in yet another handshake signifying
... nothing.
At what point will Americans
realize they've been played for the fool by a purported ally? At what point does
presidential conduct become culpable complicity? Why would The New York
Times report a decline in Barack Obama's approval ratings in Israel?
Pundits put a positive spin on
this foreign policy disaster by suggesting that Obama boxed Netanyahu in by
finessing the settlements issue and forcing the Israeli leader to mention final
status negotiations. That analysis misses the point. For Tel Aviv, there is no
final status. The point of this six-decade process is more process-to
avoid resolution.
Should Washington maneuver
Israel into a box, Tel Aviv will collapse yet another coalition government. Or
announce a resignation. That was Ben-Gurion's ruse in June 1963 when John F.
Kennedy insisted on inspections to stop Israel's nuclear arms program. Ehud
Olmert used the same negotiating tactic when it appeared that the Road Map could
lead to a final status agreement. His well-timed resignation brought back
Netanyahu.
The only party in a box is the
U.S. The way out is to end this entangled alliance and the perils to U.S.
interests that this "special relationship" was certain to create. In practical
effect, in order to keep an Israeli government intact with which to negotiate,
the U.S. must satisfy the most right-wing elements of the most right-wing
political party of an infamously right-wing foreign government. How can that be
in America's interest?
Harry Truman's recognition of
this enclave as a legitimate state was an overwrought reaction to a unique
combination of domestic and international circumstances that were manipulated to
the advantage of violent religious extremists. Their ethnic cleansing of
Palestine has yet to be either acknowledged or addressed.
After six decades of occupation
and oppression, the best a U.S. president could offer Palestinians was an
assurance that a U.S. ally-should negotiations resume-would come to the table
with "clear terms of reference." What greater insult could a U.S. president
inflict on the Arab world than such an empty promise?
Obama's performance was
pathetic. Also, in effect, he gave the green light for another mass murder in
the U.S. or in the European Union. As part of the pre-staging of another
plausible rationale for the invasion of yet another Middle Eastern nation,
mainstream U.S. media misrepresented remarks to the U.N. by Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, giving credence to Iran as a nuclear threat. That Evil Doer
portrayal is consistent with the pre-staging of other operations by which the
U.S. was induced to war on false pretenses.
The next incident could be
nuclear. While Obama was conceding to Israeli demands, Defense Minister Ehud
Barack was meeting with U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates to assure him that
Tel Aviv may yet attack Iran. In yet another signal to a worldwide audience
about just who shapes U.S. foreign policy, the Pentagon chief was accompanied by
Dennis Ross who joined Obama's Iran advisory team from a think tank affiliate of
the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
For the first time in history, a
U.S. president chaired a meeting of the U.N. Security Council. Presented with an
occasion to caution an ally not to aggravate the nuclear arms race that Kennedy
sought to halt in its infancy, Obama focused instead on Iran, forgoing a warning
to the one nation in the Middle East known to have a nuclear arsenal. And the
only nation able to deliver on the threat of deployment.
As an additional insult to Arab
nations, the U.S. negotiating team urged-despite no sign of good faith by Tel
Aviv-that those nations offer diplomatic gestures of goodwill. Or make
"substantive concessions" as Netanyahu put it. No reason was offered why, after
enduring more than sixty years of nonstop duplicity, they should agree to do so.
For anyone to assume or suggest
that Israel is operating in good faith reflects a perilous misreading of
history. What we just witnessed at the U.N. is how warfare is waged in the
Information Age. This was neither the behavior of a U.S. ally nor a nation
deserving U.S. support, friendship, arms or even recognition. Any further
appeasement of this extremist enclave and Obama can rightly be charged with
breach of his oath of office to defend the U.S. from all enemies, both domestic
and foreign.
About
the author: Jeff Gates is author of Guilt By Association, Democracy at
Risk and The Ownership Solution.
... Payvand News - 09/29/09 ... --