Takeaways from Washington
Netanyahu must also recognize the changing reality on the Palestinian side. Until 2004, the Palestinian Authority was led by Yasser Arafat, who was perceived by the Americans and Europeans as a terrorist. Now, the Palestinian leaders are viewed in Washington and within the EU as true partners in the peace process and in the effort to create a Palestinian state. It is Israel's leaders - specifically Netanyahu, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman, Likud Minister Benny Begin and Vice Prime Minister Moshe Ya'alon - who are far from being perceived in that way. In the past, the U.S. saw settlement construction as a "stick" used to deter Palestinian terror, but today it is viewed as an obstacle.
The same goes for the 'educated' and 'cultured' Fayyad. He is neither of the above. He's just another power grabbing politician without a base. He too is corrupt and a liar. Let's call him that.
We need to drive home again and again that there is no difference between Hamas and Fatah. They both want to destroy us. Why is no one saying this in Washington? Why isn't the 'peace process' being exposed as a sham? Israelis all know it. The days of Shimon Peres' 'New Middle East' are over - it's been exposed as a pipe dream. So why aren't we saying that in Washington? Why are timid in our own defense?
Obama's reaction is not a result of his victory in passing health care reform. The American president doesn't needto be strong to offend an Israeli prime minister over a matter such as settlements. And despite the hopes of some in Israel, it doesn't appear that the U.S. Jewish community will go out of its way to defend Israel on the settlement issue either.
"Netanyahu should have taken into account the change within the American Jewish community," Dov Weisglass, a senior adviser to former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, told the MESS Report. "Their support for Israel is decreasing and they will defend Israel in the face of the administration only on matters where there is a real threat to Israel. I have serious doubt that U.S. Jews see the Netanyahu government's territorial aspirations in Judea and Samaria [West Bank] and the Palestinian neighborhoods in Jerusalem as an existential matter."
But the second part of that statement is also true. We have lost American Jewry. Not all of it. But we've lost most of the non-Orthodox and nearly all of the intermarried. We have to acknowledge that - like it or not - our power base in the US is Christian. Without Christian support, America would not be supporting us. The Jews will vote for Obama regardless of what he does to us. The Christians won't. Either we cultivate that relationship or somewhere down the road they will tire of us and we will lose it. How do we cultivate that relationship? Stand up for ourselves. Show off our history. Judea and Samaria are where our biblical forefathers walked. They are God's country and God promised it to us. There's nothing wrong with making the security argument and the entitlement argument side by side. One doesn't preclude the other.
"The current Israeli government, which was founded on different guiding political principles and does not recognize the Road Map, essentially abandoned the doctrine outlined in Bush's letter. Israel brought the subject of settlement construction back to square one - and the Americans obliged them by returning to their default stance that Israel cease building beyond the Green Line."
Why are we complicit in giving the 'Palestinians' a free pass on their obligations under dozens of signed instruments?
We woke up late to defend ourselves from the Goldstone Report accusations. But now that we have defended ourselves, we can see that there is plenty to be said in our favor. The same goes for the current crisis with the US. We have rights and we need to assert them. The American people aren't fools. The Congress is on our side. Let's give them the ammunition to fight for us.
Israel Matzav: Takeaways from Washington
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