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Obama betrays hope created by Cairo speech

Craig Nelson, Associate Editor

  • Last Updated: November 02. 2009 11:47PM UAE / November 2. 2009 7:47PM GMT

It’s official: forget Cairo. Fold up the speech and throw it in the bin, or put it in that already bulging folder marked “Bad Faith & Broken Promises”.

That seems to be the unintended but unavoidably obvious message of the about-face by the US president Barack Obama and his decision last weekend to press ahead with Israeli-Palestinian talks despite Arab and Palestinian demands that Israel halt West Bank settlement construction first.


Interestingly, Mr Obama did not make the announcement himself. He put his travelling secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, up to it during a stop in Jerusalem on Saturday.

But make no mistake: the onus for the decision falls on Mr Obama himself. And in its vindication of violence over diplomacy and stalling over engagement, Mr Obama’s move ranked him alongside George W Bush, the man whose record he ran against to win the presidency.


It was Mr Bush who, in April 2004, endorsed Israel’s claim to parts of the West Bank seized in the 1967 Middle East War, a comparable victory for Israel’s policy of coercion over real negotiation.

Yet Mr Obama’s move is arguably more objectionable and, for those who supported him, far more deflating. By the time Mr Bush took the podium at the White House with Ariel Sharon, the Israeli prime minister grinning at his side, to declare certain West Bank settlements permanent, there were few remaining illusions about what the US president was and what he stood for.


By then, in particular, the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq as Mr Bush’s main pretext for invading that nation had been exposed as a sham.

Mr Obama was said to be different, and his Cairo speech gave Arabs and Muslims throughout the world a reason to think so. After all, it was in the Egyptian capital that the US leader declared in June to thunderous applause: “The situation for the Palestinian people is intolerable. And America will not turn our backs on the legitimate Palestinian aspiration for dignity, opportunity, and a state of their own.”


On Saturday, the US made a show of appearing to do precisely that.

At the news conference in Jerusalem where Washington unqualifiedly dropped the settlement precondition requirement, Mrs Clinton and the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu donned the shoes of Mr Bush and Mr Sharon.

It was not so much the ensuing dissembling that was discouraging – after all, we have grown accustomed to the evasions and lying that are rife on all sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict – but the brazenness of it that disheartened any listener who held out hope that this US administration would turn over a new leaf with Palestinians in particular, and the Arab world in general.


Here was Mr Netanyahu: “Now there has not been, not in the last 16 years – not 40 years, but 16 years – since the beginning of the peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians any demand ever put, not on restraint, but on any limitation of settlement activity as a precondition for entering negotiations.”

And what was the US secretary of state’s reply to this technically true but wildly misleading statement about Israel’s commitment to a just and lasting peace for the Palestinians? Like the trained lawyer she is, Mrs Clinton replied: “I would add just for context that what the prime minister is saying is historically accurate.”


The secretary of state’s carefully parsed answer recalled the observation of a former Middle East negotiator, Aaron David Miller: “I’m not a lawyer by training, but I know one when I see one. For far too long, many American officials involved in Arab-Israeli peacemaking, myself included, have acted as Israel’s attorney, catering and co-ordinating with the Israelis at the expense of successful peace negotiations.”


Did Mr Netanyahu reward US surrender with conciliation? Hardly. The next day a mocking, strutting Netanyahu talked about Palestinians the way one would talk, say, about an out-of-control, delusional child. He told his cabinet that he hoped that Palestinians would “get a grip” and get on with talks.

There was no immediate public reaction from Arab capitals to Washington’s reversal, implying either that Arab governments were stunned into silence or that they expected this all along and did little to prevent it. But the turn-round will have far-reaching consequences.


For one thing, one would be hard pressed to imagine what more could be done to undermine the tattered credibility among Palestinians of the so-called “moderate” president, Mahmoud Abbas.

For another, champions of “moderation” both in the region and elsewhere will have even less to show the next time young Arabs, let alone young Palestinians, demand illustrations of its benefits.

We will doubtlessly learn in coming days of the behind-the-scenes wrangling that led to Saturday’s announcement. Consider this scenario: as Mr Obama prepares to receive the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo next month and his speechwriters get busy preparing his acceptance speech, it surely must have dawned on the White House that the president was in need of some real accomplishments to buttress his widely admired skills as an orator.


Aware that many have questioned his qualifications for the prize and at the same time eager to earn it, Mr Obama bought into the chimera of the Israeli-Palestinian “peace process” at the expense of real steps towards peace.



cnelson@thenational.ae


Added: 11/05/09 12:40:00 AM

Sir, no new comment on this article.regards, HRK

Ricardo Kolbe, Cologne

Added: 11/03/09 01:46:00 PM

Sir, that's a fine article indeed.- Irrespective of what the Israeli PM and Ms. H. Clinton said, it was US-President Mr. B. Obama who said that all sort of settlement building should stop to start anew the "peace process". The Lebanese paper "The Daily Star" from yesterday coined the phrase "It is a rare occasion whereby one praises another for continuing to violate international law". It is not strange that Ms. Clinton offered this new twist. "The Princess of AIPAC" was heavily supported by the American Jewish lobby when she ran for a seat in the Senate and more so when she campaigned for the White House. Another aspect is that more than 70 members of the US Senate have recently written a letter to the President informing him of their unchanged support of Israel. So, the US-President's position is not that easy, but this he knew from the start and he should make it clear that he as President and not Ms. Clinton makes the decisions also when it comes to foreign policies. After Ms. Clinton had praised the curb of settlement construction as "unprecedented", the Isr. FM Mr. Avigdor Lieberman mentioned in the Isr. Army Radio that he is sure that a comprehensive peace won't be available within the next few years; this simply means that Israel chooses expansion over peace, a policy practised by Labour, Likud, Kadima for many years. And what can the Arabs, The Arab League, the OAPEC countries do? There is no easy answer one will say however, they have to work out a plan covering polical, economic situations that will counter Ms. Clinton's phrases - and this has to be done very quickly, to avoid that the extreme right wing Israeli PM Netanyahu is the only winner in the end.

Ricardo Kolbe, Cologne

Added: 11/03/09 04:03:00 AM

I truly believe that the Arabs, like any other nation(s), should unite to succeed.
The Arabs, as well as the middle easterners and the Africans, are divided: peoples against peoples, and governments and the peoples are against each other.Unity brings strength.Hamas kills Fatah and vice versa.And similar theme is repeated over and over in other parts of the Islamic world. I have always considered the governments, just as corrosive as Israel,as far as accomplishing the Arabs national sovereignty rights is concerned. Look at it: Sunnis killing Shiites, Shiites killing Sunnis., governments against the peoples , and, the peoples against their governments. Don't you think that all these divisiveness will be an obstacle to attaining their rights ????
Put yourself, for a moment, in place of the Israelis or Americans: how sure are you going to feel that if you make agreement with one faction, that the other faction would honor that agreement ?? And if the factions speak for their own self-interests, then the agreement would not be acceptable to others.
They are their own worst enemies.

MARK NABAVI, LEESBURG

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