Certainly not happy campers here.....
Kourosh Ziabari
November 17, 2011
Despite pretentiously showing gestures of friendship and
cordiality, the ideological gap between the U.S. President Barack Obama and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is getting wider increasingly.
The contents of a recent would-be private conversation
between the U.S. President Barack Obama and his French counterpart Nicolas
Sarkozy in which the two described Netanyahu as a "liar" infuriated
the Zionist lobby in the West and once again underscored the growing conflicts
between the U.S. and its client state, Israel.
According to Russia
Today, the Frenchman told his American counterpart in what was supposed to be a
confidential discussion on the sidelines of G20 summit in Cannes that "I
can't stand him," referring to the Prime Minister of the Zionist regime.
Obama's reply was "You're
fed up with him, but I have to deal with him every day!"
According to the
French website "Arret Sur Images", the private conversation between
the two was broadcast to a half-dozen-strong press crowd when microphones were
accidentally left switched on.
The Russian network
further adds that "the tensions between the Israeli leader and some of his
Western partners, including Obama, are no big secret, but the differences have
not been brought to the public eye in such blunt terms before."
Although Obama has
recurrently talked of his commitment to the security of Israel and shattered
the peaces of Palestinians for realizing statehood by saying that "there's
no shortcut to peace" and implying in his UN General Assembly address that
the U.S. would veto any UNSC resolution demanding Palestine's membership in the
UN, he cannot withhold from the public his confrontations with the pigheaded
Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu who has ruled out any possibility
of recognizing Palestine based on the pre-1967 borders and retreating from the
Occupied Territories.
In May 2011, Reuters
reported that a bilateral meeting of Obama and Netanyahu ended bitterly as the
U.S. President insisted that in order to start peace negotiations, Israel
should return back to the pre-1967 war borders and concede the Gaza Strip, West
Bank and East Jerusalem (Al-Quds) to Palestinians. The inflexible and stubborn
Israeli Prime Minister, however, responded to Obama's appeal disdainfully,
saying that "peace based on illusions will crash eventually on the rocks
of Middle East reality."
Obama nervously
stressed that the goal of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks has to be
establishing "a secure Israeli state, a Jewish state, living side by side
in peace and security with a contiguous, functioning and effective Palestinian
state." But the obstinate Netanyahu responded by saying that "we
can't go back to those indefensible lines," indicating an unfriendly
acrimony between the stalwart allies.
According to some
Israeli officials, Benjamin Netanyahu was determined to react to Obama in a
hard-hitting and unsympathetic manner because the reference to 1967 borders would
be considered "a red flag that would attract more international pressure
on Israel for concessions." A senior Israeli official said Netanyahu felt
he had to speak bluntly so he would be "heard around the world."
"There is a feeling that Washington does not understand the
reality, doesn't understand what we face," an official on board the plane
taking Netanyahu to Washington told reporters.
So, it's clear that
Israel does not hesitate to embarrass its largest and most powerful supporter
before the eyes of the international community, should it sense an iota of
threat that it might be compelled to make concessions and abandon its
expansionistic policies.
Now, the
neoconservative pundits and right-wing politicians around the world are
extremely frustrated with Barack Obama and believe that if he wants to secure a
second term in the Oval Office, he should satisfy the demands of Israel and as
the first step, block Palestine's efforts to join the UN and other
international organizations.
Extremist, right-wing
journalists and politicians believe that Obama's behavior toward the
Palestinians is too lenient for a U.S. President and that he has failed to meet
the interests of Israel as its number one political ally.
Elliot Abrams, a
Middle East expert in the George W. Bush administration says that Obama's short
comment on Netanyahu in meeting with Sarkozy is not something to be gotten away
with negligently: "If this were only a matter of personal relations
between Obama and Netanyahu, it could be left at that. But it is far more
consequential, for by that comment ~ and especially as it was made in private
and can be interpreted as his actual view ~ President Obama has joined the
chorus of assaults on the Jewish State."
At any rate, it's
clear that Obama has serious ideological differences with Netanyahu, even
though he has assured AIPAC that "the commitment of the United States to
the security of Israel is ironclad."
Even if he wants to,
Obama cannot tread a path which is not in accordance with the interests of the
Israeli regime. As Naseer Aruri, a Chancellor Professor
(emeritus) of Political Science from the University of Massachusetts at
Dartmouth puts it, "no politician with an anti-Zionist mindset can even
dream of living in the White House."
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