Posted By Kristen Silverberg Share

By Kristen Silverberg

A number of U.S. commentators are reading Prime Minister Netanyahu's speech as a bow to President Obama. I had the opposite reaction. Netanyahu's speech reads to me to be, at least in part, a rebuttal, including to Obama's Cairo speech.

It is unlikely the treatment of Iran in the Cairo speech escaped Israeli notice. To the extent Obama addressed the Iranian nuclear issue, it was largely to reiterate U.S. concessions to the Iranian government: He accepted U.S. responsibility for overthrowing the leader of Iran, restated U.S. willingness to move forward with negotiations with the Iranian government, and reaffirmed Iran's rights to peaceful nuclear power. The sole sentence critical of Iran stated only that "Iran played a role in acts of hostage-taking and violence against U.S. troops and civilians," but then expressed our willingness to let bygones be bygones. This approach, combined with Obama's declaration that the United States would give Iran until the end of the year to demonstrate good faith, as well as his view that progress in the Peace Process is a prerequisite to progress on Iran, undoubtedly has left the impression that the U.S. urgency on Iranian issues has flagged.

For Netanyahu, in contrast, Iran is the first issue he mentioned and is at the top of the list of the "three tremendous challenges" facing the world today. He stated clearly,

The Iranian threat still is before us in full force, as became quite clear yesterday. The greatest danger to Israel, to the Middle East, and to all humanity, is the encounter between extremist Islam and nuclear weapons.... I have been working tirelessly for many years to form an international front against Iran arming itself with nuclear weapons.

Likewise, Netanyahu disputed Obama on the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict. While Obama's Cairo speech adopted the Arab view that Jewish claims to a homeland in Israel are rooted solely in the Holocaust, Netanyahu explained at length:

The connection of the Jewish People to the Land has been in existence for more than 3,500 years. Judea and Samaria, the places where our forefathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob walked, our forefathers David, Solomon, Isaiah and Jeremiah. This is not a foreign land, this is the Land of our Forefathers.

The right of the Jewish People to a state in the Land of Israel does not arise from the series of disasters that befell the Jewish People over 2,000 years -- persecutions, expulsions, pogroms, blood libels, murders, which reached its climax in the Holocaust, an unprecedented tragedy in the history of nations.... The right to establish our sovereign state here, in the Land of Israel, arises from one simple fact: Eretz Israel is the birthplace of the Jewish People.

These aren't minor, rhetorical issues -- both our treatment of the Iranian question and U.S. views on the legitimacy of Israeli claims are at the core of the U.S.-Israel relationship. This was further confirmation that we have leaders with profoundly different worldviews, and suggests at least some reason for concern about the state of the U.S.-Israel relationship going forward.

 
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BETZ55

1:05 AM ET

June 16, 2009

He emphasized that the Jewish

He emphasized that the Jewish people have been linked to the land of Israel for over 3,000 years and ruled out the option of granting Palestinians refugees the right to settle within Israeli borders.

Someone will have to explain to me why a Jewish link to the land of Israel precludes an Arab link to it as well. Clearly, one doesn’t negate the other except in the mind of Jewish/Israeli nationalist/rightists.

The nation of Israel is just a European colony that got enough guns to steal their neighbor's land and resources, then claim that they were occupying the land because they were the "people without a land." And since they drove out the Palestinians, they took the Palestinian's land and said it was a "land without a people."

Since then it;s been the responsibility of the US to protect them from the hordes of unarmed, starving, humiliated and oppressed Palestinians.

Using some fairytale religious text that tells them they're superior as a basis for foreign policy, nation creation and war is madness. Our obligation is to the unarmed civilians of Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran and now Pakistan which is the next nation the Zionists want us to attack.

We have no moral obligation to Israel whatsoever. It was a nation created illegally in a nation already populated by people who had been there for thousands of years.

 

BRETT

8:39 AM ET

June 16, 2009

The connection of the Jewish

The connection of the Jewish People to the Land has been in existence for more than 3,500 years. Judea and Samaria, the places where our forefathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob walked, our forefathers David, Solomon, Isaiah and Jeremiah. This is not a foreign land, this is the Land of our Forefathers.

This statement alone has me convinced that he's not serious about any type of Two-State Solution, and won't be unless the US puts his balls to the fire by either threatening to cut aid or pushing him until his government collapses and Israel is forced to have new elections.

I mean, come on - is a guy who really believes that the land in question is sacred land given to his forefathers, the home of his sacred ancestors, the type of guy who is going to let it sit under the control of the Palestinians?

 

ELLEN

8:29 AM ET

June 18, 2009

Switzerland is mine because

Switzerland is mine because somewhere, somehow I must be descended from Charlimagne.

 

DECONSTRUCTOR

10:02 AM ET

June 16, 2009

Independent Palestinian State

The preconditions set for the establishment of a Palestinian state deprive a future state of its substance. No control over borders, airspace, water resources of Palestinian state by Israel? Why? Which reasonable person would accept these conditions and a fried-chicken state? Even the private security contractors in Iraq have more powers than the future Palestinian state.

It is the right time for the Palestinian Authority to declare independence within the borders as recognized in the respective resolutions of the UN Security Council and achieve international recognition rather than a sit-and-wait approach. What are you waiting? You are waiting when the whole West Bank and all valuable land is expropriated by Israel and you live in the desert?

 

WOLFBOY

1:41 PM ET

June 16, 2009

I agree it was a rebuttal

As to the specifics of your comment, however:

Iran has the right to peaceful nuclear power, and the US has the obligation to engage seriously in disarmament, under the NNPT. Denying both of these things simultaneously, as Bush did, was never going to yield fruit.

You say Obama "adopted the Arab view that Jewish claims to a homeland in Israel are rooted solely in the Holocaust."
This is not true - please use your critical faculties rather than mindlessly repeating Likud talking points - and Netanyahu did more than rebut this perceived slight - he reiterated a claim on the whole west bank.

 

FNORD

5:20 PM ET

June 17, 2009

Its obvious.

One only need to read Jerusalem post and their commenters to see where Nethanyahu comes from. Caroline Glick and others are openly describing the president as an enemy of Israel, "obsessed" with the settlements, incapable of "rational dialogue". And in the comment-section below all of these, the real dirty underside of the Israeli right creeps forth, with hundreds of folks saying Obama is the new pharaoh, a muslim, and of course an anti-semite trained by reverend Wright. (Its strange to see the J. Post sink to the level below the Pajamas Media.) Members of his cabinet are openly racistic against arabs on TV, and it has no consequence.

It is clear that Nethanyahu is dead set on stalling, lying, fighting, kick and scream for the next 4 years while playing to his base, insisting on the ploy of the Jewish identity being a more important identity of the state of Israel than democracy. It seems like Israel has gradually reverted to pure tribalism. Its going to be an interesting few years.

 

Shadow Government is a blog about U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration, written by experienced policy makers from the loyal opposition and curated by Peter D. Feaver and William Inboden.

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