September 22, 2009 11:13 AM

No Need For An Obama Speech In Israel

By
CBSNews
(The New Republic)  Shmuel Rosner is a senior editor at The New Republic


Two Israeli writers caused a stir last week by calling on President Obama to speak directly to Israelis, similar to the way he has addressed populations from Cairo to Moscow. "Simply stated, take your campaign directly to the Israeli people, and soon," Bradley Burston wrote in a Haaretz blog post. "Fail to do this, or wait too long, and you'd be well advised to leave the table while you still have chips." Aluf Benn echoed this sentiment in The New York Times: "This policy of ignoring Israel carries a price." Similar points were made just two weeks ago in a study by the Center for American Progress.

Both Benn and Burston seem to believe that Israelis disapprove of Obama because they don't understand what he wants--simply because he has failed to explain it to them. It's unsurprising that columnists friendly to the ideas of the Israeli center-left would suggest that Israelis are actually in line with Obama's agenda. But there's an easier way of interpreting Israelis' uneasiness with Obama: They do understand him, and do not agree with him. If that's the case, more Obama-talk will not make a big difference. It is very common to blame "communication" when things go badly between two parties. However, there are many things that no improvement of communication will remedy.

Both writers assume that Israelis don't care much for settlements, and I tend to agree. However, as Benn starts explaining while not quite completing his argument ("Mr. Obama has made a mistake in focusing on a settlement freeze"), Israelis also don't care much for doing something for no particular reason, or just because there's a new sheriff in town. The settlements should certainly go, most Israelis believe--but they should go at this specific time only if the president can logically explain the benefit Israelis will gain from letting them go now. If all he has is the general "settlements are bad for Israel" argument, then nothing much has changed; Israelis already know that.

Yes, Israelis might appreciate the honor of having the U.S. president talking directly to them. (As Benn writes, "In the 16 rosy years of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, Israelis became spoiled by unfettered presidential attention.") But what exactly is he going to tell them? That peace is good for all and that he wants to advance peace? They know. That Palestinians suffer? They know. That he cares deeply for Israel's security? They know he says that, and would like to believe it, but the real game-changer will require proof, not words. Clinton and Bush didn't just say "We care for Israel" and instantly become darlings of the Israeli public. They showed they care--mostly by getting along well with the Israeli governments of Rabin and Sharon respectively. The Obama administration has done little to curry Israeli trust with their churlish attitude toward Netanyahu. In this sense, I agree with Benn and Burston: Regardless of the inevitable vapidity of an Obama speech directed at Israelis, the act of making the trip to Israel would be at least be a "deed"--a demonstration of good will on his part.

But words alone will not make Israelis trust Obama. Israelis do not suffer from lack of understanding of the issues; they suffer from peace-fatigue. They look at "peace processes" with suspicion, based on experience and events. They are scarred enough to know what has working and what has not, and they are tired of the good intentions of enthusiastic novices, believing that with their youth and their smarts they'll be able to come up with some magic trick that can somehow round a square. What Obama needs is a convincing plan that makes sense. It does not look like he has one.

The president has reportedly sent letters to seven Arab leaders reminding them of "the need for CBMs [confidence-building measures] in exchange for [a settlement] freeze and to [get] peace talks restarted." It hasn't worked very well, and Israelis will be aware of this failure if they hear Obama talking about the need to stop settlement construction. So perhaps instead of the president making the effort of "talking directly" to Israelis with nothing new to say, maybe he ought to put his efforts into convincing someone else to address Israelis--somebody whose very act of speaking to Israelis would be significant in its own right. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia or President Bashar Al-Assad of Syria come to mind.

Regardless of its futility, my sources tell me that an Obama address to Israelis is coming soon. (Joe Klein was first to report this.) If he must do so, I can offer three pieces of advice: First, don't lecture Israelis like you know what's good for them better than they know themselves. You don't. Second, don't try to do an end-run on the Israeli government like you've done in other world capitols by speaking directly to "the people." Don't patronize them by saying that the Israel public knows better than its government what needs to be done. The public elected this government; the public you're talking about is the public of some liberal American Jews, which has little relevance to the current reality in Israel. And third, don't promise peace within a year or two. History is a better teacher of that lesson than I am.

I, for one, will not be disappointed if Obama chooses not to make the effort. I don't think that Obama needs the approval of Israelis--nor, for that matter, that it is crucial for Israelis to have the personal sympathies of the American president. In fact, I think those "spoiled" Israelis can benefit from being reminded that not all presidents will be a Clinton or a Bush. Presidents come with different priorities and changing agendas--and Israel should make sure that it is always strategically benefiting the United States rather than relying on intangible romantic notions of shared values and religious sympathies to bolster the relationship. And perhaps more importantly, Israelis need to be reminded that we can live, for a long or short period of time, with a less demonstrably friendly America with no need for hysteria.

By Shmuel Rosner
Reprinted with permission from The New Republic

The New Republic
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by rhs648 August 6, 2009 11:03 PM EDT
hungry1968 - What are you on? Name one thing the Palestinians invented in the last 100 years. You talk of Palestinian technology. Are you referring to the scarves they wear to hide their identy? Are you talking about their homeade bombs? Are you talking about the guns they import instead of food? Are you talking about the electricity Israel must provide to the Palestinians? The Palestinians know only violence and war and they aren't very good at either one.
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by hungry1968-16 August 6, 2009 9:35 PM EDT
by PeaceHasAPrice August 6, 2009 8:15 PM EDT
Right here is the prime example of why we need Israel as our ally. The example is an IQ called Hungry 1968 aka somebody else.

If it were not for Israel doing the brainwork for all of the US major research and development, we would not have nice innovations like advanced weaponary, agricultural advancements, medical advancements, and technological advancements.

It's a shame when the education level of Americans are so reduced to a gob of glub like Hungry1968 aka whomever, that we have to rent out the brainpower of a country who raises their children in educational diligence.







What a joke.

EVERYTHING that Israel has - INCLUDING technology, was stolen from the Palestinians.

I see that you listen to EVERY word that the pro-zion lobby feeds you in your dog bowl though.

Now - roll over! Good Boy!!

Sit up!! Good Boy!!

Beg!! -- Oh wait, that's what Israel does for their next welfare check.
Reply to this comment
by wmsshields August 6, 2009 8:20 PM EDT
The Israelis have learned what Americans had no time to learn; Obama will say anything he thinks you want to hear, but there will be no truth nor substance to it. There is no need to invite him to talk to you. He will not talk to, nor listen to, Americans.
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by kikomanson August 6, 2009 6:43 PM EDT
We are involved in two wars in the Middle East, Why? our blind support for Israel. The Republican party crusade's agenda and the Fundamental Right Wing Religious agenda.
Israel must follow their vision of their rights as a nation on their own ! They must first be winged of the $3 billion per year military American taxpayer teet. They must no longer be allowed White
Prosperous, Cluster bombs and now Bunker buster bombs in their Crusade to remain the only ILLEGAL nuclear power in the Middle East.

Not one more American life is worth the support of Israel, and those Americans that recite the second coming of the Lord through Israel !

The most murderous country in the world !
Reply to this comment
by kikomanson August 6, 2009 6:39 PM EDT
We are involved in two wars in the Middle East, Why? our blind support for Israel. The Republican party crusade's agenda and the Fundamental Right Wing Religious agenda.
Israel follow their vision of their rights as a nation on their own ! They must first be winged of the $3 billion per year military American taxpayer teet. They must no longer be allowed White
Prosperous, Cluster bombs and now Bunker buster bomb in their Crusade to remain the only ILLEGAL nuclear power in the Middle East.

Not one more American life is worth the support of Israel, and those Americans that recite the second coming of the Lord through Israel !

The most murderous country in the world, they learned much from the Nazi's.
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-16 August 6, 2009 6:18 PM EDT
by SpinningLiberals August 6, 2009 4:08 PM EDT
NAZI's:
- did not like "big" business
- favored government intervention in peoples' lives
- were pro-abortion
- believed in government run healthcare
- wanted citizens to snitch on citizens w/ opposing views
....(like Obama's "flag@whitehouse.gov"

SOUND FAMILIAR
Nazism is much closer to OdumbaCrats than it is to Republicans
.

An eloquent speaker with a following of
zombie-like sheeple chanting:
"SiegHeil, SiegHeil ,,,excuse me,,,
I meant "Hope&Change, Hope&Change"

Obama is the most Hitleresque politician I have ever seen







You just quoted Rush Limbaugh's radio show word for word, and he too should be committed to a mental institution.
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-16 August 6, 2009 6:16 PM EDT
Pissss on this welfare state.

We should have sided with the Palestinians in 1948.

The mideast would have been peaceful since then.
Reply to this comment
by slownewsday_5 August 6, 2009 9:42 PM EDT
"If it were not for Israel doing the brainwork for all of the US major research and development, we would not have nice innovations like advanced weaponary, agricultural advancements, medical advancements, and technological advancements."


You sound just like Rowdy. You think the Israelis are somehow superior to Americans? Are you high??
by thusspokezara August 6, 2009 5:55 PM EDT
Obama needs to get tough with Israel. He should send Jimmy Carter to the Middle East as special envoy. Carter should make it clear to Israel that if they bomb Iran, we will go the UN and organize an invasion of Israel. Then when we have taken over we can give the land to its rightful owners, the British.
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by slownewsday_5 August 6, 2009 5:49 PM EDT
No way we need to support a terrorist state like Israel.


.
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by thusspokezara August 6, 2009 5:30 PM EDT
You are not being fair. It is true that Rham Emanuel is as ruthless and sadistic as Joseph Goebbels, but the comparisons stop there.
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