On Israel/Palestine, We’ve Convinced Obama, Now We Must Pressure Him

by Philip Weiss on November 5, 2008 · 14 comments

The news says Rahm Emanuel is gonna be chief of staff. Here is Congressman Rahm Emanuel, the likely gatekeeper to Obama, blaming the Palestinians for the violence in Israel/Palestine in '07–Emanuel saying that a cycle of violence that has wracked Palestine for 100 years is all the Arabs' fault. Rahm Emanuel, son of an Irgun man, who ran off to serve Israel, not the U.S., in the first Gulf War.

Take heart. My friend James North says Obama is not about to become a Palestinian nationalist–he's way too careful– he knows the centrality of the issue, and he is basically on our side. Never forget: This man was friends with Rashid Khalidi. That friendship justly gave the Israel lobby the willies.

In North's capacity as Beschloss, he offered the following Vivid Presidential Anecdotes:

LBJ: "You want me to be a statesman. First you have to get me elected." 

And, brilliantly, FDR to activists who were belaboring a point: "OK, you've convinced me. Now go out and put pressure on me."

At the risk of gilding the lily, James North explains FDR's calculation: "I'm on your side. But I'm a politician. I can't expend political capital unless you show the world that I was pressured to do so."

We will pressure Obama!

Related posts:

  1. Alert! Obama to Unchain Foggy-Bottom Arabists Who Will Pressure Israel to Stop Building Glorious Colonies in West Bank
  2. Freeman ouster is signal, Obama won’t put pressure on Israel
  3. Walt: Barack & Rahm Have to Know that Being ‘Pro-Israel’ Means Bringing Big Pressure Against Occupation Now
  4. Obama: Israel Would Be ‘Crazy’ Not to Take ‘67 Borders for Peace
  5. Throwing Khalidi Under Bus, Obama Is Said to Tap Emanuel, Former Volunteer in Israel

{ 14 comments }

1 jonathan ekman November 5, 2008 at 11:34 am

That such an ardent Zionist (with possible
dual citizenship and definite dual loyalty)
as Rahm E could conceivably occupy such an
important position and even cultivate presidential aspirations is a sobering proof
of the immense influence of the Zionist Power Configuration in this rapidly declining
and suicidal country.

2 Richard Witty November 5, 2008 at 12:03 pm

On Palestinian behavior.

Yesterday Hamas resumed shelling southern Israel. For the US elections?

Lucky for us, the world didn't hear of it, or make too much of it.

But, it IS true that some Palestinians take every opportunity to stick it to Israel as a means of notoriety, rather than negotiating with Israel to accomplish an actual goal.

The significance of the resumption of the Qassams is that Hamas regards itself as permanently at war with Israel, that even a cease-fire is only that, and even in that their word is void.

They want to communicate that they are the controllers, the upper hand, also using Palestinian civilians as fodder.

All when good things are possible. So long as Hamas engages in war, Israeli defense will have Obama's ear.

So long as war is relaxed (as it is demonstrated is possible, by the four-month sincere and mutual ceasefire), Israeli moral leaders will have Obama's ear.

3 Madrid November 5, 2008 at 12:07 pm

Very bad news indeed… Of course, if you are an eternal optimist like Phil, then anything floats your boat.

I have a feeling Obama has a great future in bombing Middle Eastern countries and other people with brown skin.

4 Madrid November 5, 2008 at 12:09 pm

Richard Witty– of course you are obfuscating once again.

Even Drudge in this case noted that Israel bombed Southern Gaza first, killing 6 Palestinians, and that the Hamas rockets came in response to the Israeli bombing.

Stop assuming you are dealing with idiots on this site, and go peddle your wares to more naive prey.

5 Phoenix November 5, 2008 at 12:20 pm

My friend Sol Salbe just told me that after Michelle Obama, the next happiest woman in the world about Barack Obama’s victory is Tzipi Livni. Israelis are no fools. Despite their vaunted independence and prickliness when the world appears to be telling them what to do, Israelis “don’t need a weathervane to know which way the winds blow.” Perhaps if John McCain had won the Israeli voter would’ve felt empowered to choose Bibi Netanyahu. But with Obama’s blowout victory, Israelis can sense that Americans have tired of the Bush administration’s blank check approach to dealing with Israeli settlements and the conflict with the Palestinians. Clearly, Israelis do not take their marching orders from Washington. But I think the spirit of the U.S. election will have a substantial impact on the Israeli election.

The most moving passage in Obama’s victory speech tonight was one that should resonate in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa:

…To all those watching tonight from beyond our shores, from parliaments and palaces to those who are huddled around radios in the forgotten corners of our world our stories are singular, but our destiny is shared, and a new dawn of American leadership is at hand. To those who would tear this world down we will defeat you. To those who seek peace and security we support you. And to all those who have wondered if America’s beacon still burns as bright tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from our the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope.

For that is the true genius of America that America can change. Our union can be perfected.

Obama is telling the world that he’s less interested in going to war with Iran than in negotiating his way out of the nuclear impasse. He’s telling Israel that it too must hold true to its own democratic ideals and not fall prey to the illusion that military power can impose its will on the Palestinian people. He’s telling Syria that there’s a place for it in the family of nations if it chooses to turn its back on Iran and embrace peace with Israel. And I think he’s telling the Palestinian people that though he may not be their champion, he will ensure that they get a fairer deal than has been possible for the past eight years.

Though Obama has campaigned as somewhat of a hardliner on issues like Iran and Jerusalem to ensure support from the Jewish community, I do not believe he will govern or implement policy as a hawk. Nor will he be the “anti-Israel” pushover imagined by McCain and Jewish Republicans. He will not govern from ideology or even primarily from a sense of altruism. He will be a hard-headed realist trying to hold fast to a set of overarching principles.

Despite promising Aipac that he would never accept a divided Jerusalem (and finessing that statement the following day), he will indeed accept such an eventuality. Tzipi Livni is in effect endorsing this option, making it easier for Obama to do so as well when the right time comes. Though he has said Hamas is not a partner for peace, I think he realizes this is not a realistic approach if you want to bring the entire spectrum of Palestinian opinion into a peace agreement. At some point in the next four years, both the Israeli and U.S. governments will be talking to Hamas. Perhaps not directly, but they will be negotiating with Hamas. There is no other way.

Obama will probably also come down somewhere close to the Geneva Initiative/Saudi peace plan provisions for a return of the vast majority of West Bank territority while retaining the largest and oldest settlement population centers. Essentially, he will have an opportunity to turn back the clock to Taba in 2000 and see if he can get it right this time.

Equally important is what happens in Israel. In the short term, Ehud Olmert will be Israel’s prime minister. Given Olmert’s seminal interview in Yediot Ahronot in which he essentially conceded the entire progressive analysis of the conflict over the past 40 years, we can assume that Olmert and the Obama administration might achieve substantial progress on issues like negotiations with Syria and perhaps with the Palestinians. But I don’t think that Israel will be willing to allow Olmert to seal a deal in any of these matters given the election upcoming on February 10th.

What happens on that date is crucial to the future of the entire region. If Bibi Netanyahu, leader of the Likud opposition, and until recently frontrunner in the polls wins, then it will be a cold day in Hell before peace agreements are signed with either the Syrians or Palestinians. In addition, we can expect continuing bellicosity towards Iran (and vice versa). Certainly an Israeli attack against Iran is in the cards along with escalating violence towards the Palestinians. One should expect Hamas to forgo its six month long truce and return to Qassam and terror attacks.

No matter how deft Obama’s policy is, I don’t see any way he can make progress with the rejectionist Likud in power. No one should make any mistake that Netanyahu is capable to doing a Sharon and becoming a pragmatic moderate when faced with governing (as opposed to campaigning, which always brings out the worst in Israeli politicians). Netanyahu is no Sharon. He is an opportunist and ideologue at the same time, but he is not pragmatic in the way that Sharon was.

But happily there is another scenario that polls have lately confirmed may be possible. After facing down two Orthodox parties which were shaking her down for large financial incentives to join the governing coalition she was attempting to broker, her popularity has increased substantially. Current polls show her with a slight edge over Netanyahu. It should be noted that such polls are extremely volatile in Israel and there are several political lifetimes between now and February 10th.

That being said, if we project that Tzipi Livni wins the election, then the sky’s the limit. We will have an eminently pragmatic U.S. president and a newly pragmatic Israeli prime minister. Both are deeply serious politicians who understand that there is a lot riding on their success not just for their respective countries and the region, but the world itself. While each side may historically not miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity (to repurpose an old Abba Eban insult directed at the Palestinians), but I believe it will be different with Obama and Livni.

As I wrote above, their is a general consensus on the outlines of an agreement: a return to pre-67 borders with slight territorial adjustments, sharing Jerusalem, financial compensation for Palestinian 1948 refugees, full diplomatic recognition and normalization of relations with Arab nations.

Despite the fact that the outline is known, that will not make it any easier to reach an agreement. Doing so will require Livni to make much more painful decisions than even Sharon made in evacuating Gaza. Despite the fact that Israel will likely be able to retain the largest and oldest settlement blocs, there will be much pain both for the settlers and Israel at large at giving up on the dream of Greater Israel.

Extremists among the settlement movement have determined to exact a stiff price for every government action that harms their interest. The threat of Jewish terror is very real. In fact, the Shin Bet has just warned that such militants may be planning on political assassinations as one of their tactics of drawing blood in the struggle against a state many of them view as illegitimate. The security chief, Yuval Diskin told the cabinet the following:

“The scope of the conflict will be much larger than it is today and than it was during the disengagement,” Diskin warned. “Our investigation found a very high willingness among this public to use violence…in order to prevent or halt a diplomatic process.”

While Diskin did not comment explicitly on the danger of another political assassination, the timing of his warning – just days before the anniversary of prime minister Yitzhak Rabin’s assassination – was not lost on cabinet members.

“They [the settlers] don’t think like us. Their thought is messianic, mystic, satanic and irrational,” Infrastructure Minister Benjamin Ben-Eliezer said, warning of another political assassination.

“What we are seeing today is the result of a deep rift with the faith-based community, and not only in the West Bank,” Diskin said. “Their…slogan is ‘through war, we will win.”

Clearly, Livni is an untested commodity until now. No one knows whether she, like Sharon, will have the intestinal fortitude to face down the extreme nationalist Israeli right. After all, her own political heritage derives from parents who waved the banner as senior leaders of the nationalist right and may even have supported acts of Jewish terror in the struggle for statehood. It should be added though, that Livni is no ideologue and has freed herself from any adherence to rightist ideology. She is a centrist and a pragmatist. But whether she has a vision of where Israel needs to go and how to get there is an open question.

And this is where the skill and persuasive powers of a President Obama will be called for. He must forge an alliance with Livni that carries both Israeli and American Jewish opinion before it. He must also sell the deal to both the Palestinians and the Syrians. The latter, in particular will require a major break with past U.S. policy. We must bring the Syrian regime back in from the cold to which it was subjected for the eight years of the Bush administration. Obama must do this not so much because he admires Bashir Assad, but because doing so will likely transform the region. Peace with Syria opens the possibility of normalization of Israeli relations with Lebanon. And finally, “turning” Syria will further isolate Iran and bring Syria into a closer relationship with the west.

Regarding Iran, if an Obama administration can destroy the Iran-Syria alliance while at the same time persuading the ayatollahs that he is willing to open a dialogue with them on issues of interest to them (including normalization of relations)–then perhaps a compromise could emerge on Iran’s nuclear research. I believe that if the Bush administration can broker a deal with North Korea as appears likely from latest developments, then there is no reason Obama couldn’t do the same with Iran.

I think the prevailing notion of Obama administration Middle East policy should be that there are no permanent enemies, only permanent interests. Peace must be a permanent and prevailing interest. And peace IS achievable.

6 anon November 5, 2008 at 12:49 pm

Nothing will change if Obama doesn't bring the leverage of USA foreign aid & memos of understanding into play–with the USA bankrupt, if not now, never.

With ultra-zionists apparently to be picked by Obama for major
staff & department positions, I don't see the audacity of hope, just an Uncle Tom butler at the local Weinberg residence.

Could it be that the blacks have tossed off the chains of "white America" to exchange them for more regular chains, the chains of
finance?

7 Doppler November 5, 2008 at 12:57 pm

Agriprocessors, Inc., the world's largest kosher meatpacking plant, filed for bankruptcy this morning, http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5h6D19n6iXOIscqxYjzf5ujU_auQQD948SC2O0
a week after its President Sholom Rubashkin was arrested on charges of having paid to supply numerous illegal workers with fraudulent papers just prior to an INS raid last May in which some 300 illegal workers were arrested.
http://iowaindependent.com/7780/breaking-rubashkin-arrested-will-appear-in-federal-court-today

Coincidentally, I just finished reading Stephen Bloom's book, Postville: A Clash of Cultures in Heartland America, about the Lubavitchers' amazing move into Postville. The cover photograph alone is priceless:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0156013363/ref=sib_dp_pop_fc?ie=UTF8&p=S001#reader-link

The book is of interest not only in chronicling the clash of cultures between the pious and strictly insular orthodox Jews versus the rural Iowa farmers, but in the author's examination of his own feelings and values, torn between his longing for his Jewish history and identity, and his appreciation for the simpler but more universal values of the Iowans. It is also a study in journalistic values, where the role and identity of the reporter or author becomes part of the story: as a secular Jew, he is invited into the Lubavitcher community as part of their prosyletizing efforts, access that could only come to a Jew willing to share the Sabbath, with young son in tow.

The key insight for me is at page 192:

"I am a racist." Lazar [a Rabbi whose wife and seven children welcome the father-son pair to their Sabbath dinner table and sleep-over] said, seemingly from nowhere. "Why is it that Israel has persisted to exist for so long? Why haven't the Jews been extinguished after scores of attempts throughout history? That we are still here defies logic. There is only one answer: We are better and smarter. That's why!"

As to the natives, here's the response of the local newspaper editor to charges of Anti-Semitism: "We are not Anti-Semitic. If a group of French people came to Postville to start a winery, and if they behaved the way the Jews behaved here, you betcha we'd have problems."

Bloom reports it straight, with no pulled punches, opting to continue on his secular path. By neither joining nor protecting the Lubavitcher's from the clear light of his pen, he can ultimately be seen as taking sides with the townies, and the afterword shows that he bears the wrath of stern admonitions of "shame!" for telling such stories on his own people.

To "pressure" Obama, it seems to me that efforts should focus on the facts on the ground in the West Bank, and the reporting of them to the American people. Americans, like others, do best when they have the facts. Because the fact-reporting process has not worked, someone who is familiar with how it is disabled needs to tell that story, as well.

8 Richard Witty November 5, 2008 at 1:00 pm

Good post Phoenix.

9 Richard Witty November 5, 2008 at 1:03 pm

Madrid,
Two days prior to the IDF action you referred, there was also shelling (at a smaller scale), and claims of discovery of a planned larger assault on the border crossing.

Both the Israeli action and the Hamas shelling were incremental escalations.

10 Colin Murray November 5, 2008 at 1:49 pm

Mr. Witty: "So long as war is relaxed (as it is demonstrated is possible, by the four-month sincere and mutual ceasefire), Israeli moral leaders will have Obama's ear."

This is self-delusion. There has been no 'sincere and mutual ceasefire'. The campaign of creeping ethnic cleansing in the OPT did not slow down at all. Internal checkpoints were still stifling legitimate social, political, and economic activity, building permits were denied, 'illegal' houses were bulldozed, exit papers for students were denied, etc, etc. Indeed, there is a longstanding pattern that colonization speeds up during periods of quiet. A very strong case can be made that there is an inverse correlation between the level violent Palestinian resistance and the rate of colonization. It seems like such an obvious 'no-duh' kind of pattern, and it says a lot more about Israelis than it does about Palestinians. If only those uncooperative Palestinians would quietly acquiesce to our creeping ethnic cleansing, we wouldn't have to shoot at them! They are so very rude, and bring it upon themselves!

11 JOHN DICKERSON November 5, 2008 at 2:20 pm

Thank you, Mr. Witty for showing your true colors. I now know that you tell half-truths, quarter-truths, etc. and I will never take what you say at face value. You, like a McCain attack ad, cannot be trusted. As you so in-artfully put it, your "word is void"!!!!!!!

12 JOHN DICKERSON November 5, 2008 at 2:35 pm

As Burl Ives (playing Big Daddy) told Paul Newman (playing Brick) in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof", there is nothing I despise more than mendacity. Mr. Witty you are mendacious!

13 JOHN DICKERSON November 5, 2008 at 2:49 pm

"I believe that if the Bush administration can broker a deal with North Korea as appears likely from latest developments, then there is no reason Obama couldn’t do the same with Iran."

THERE ARE AT LEAST TWO REASONS: ISRAEL & AIPAC!!!!!!!!!!!!

14 anon November 5, 2008 at 5:16 pm

Good post, Doppler. Real Americans, wake up!

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