Tag Archives: Israel

Don’t Know Much About The Middle East

Jonathan Chait may at times be smarmy and annoying, but credit where it is due; when he is on, he is on. Chait’s evisceration of Juan Cole is a must-read.

Obama’s Israel Crisis

In the end, Obama will likely have to face the fact (or suffer the consequences of refusing to face it) that the Israeli-Arab conflict is impervious to Israeli concessions. There is a fairly good reason for this, which is usually lost in the firestorm of pontification that greats anything and everything to do with Israel. It is simply this: the Israeli-Arab conflict was begun by the Arabs, and it can only be ended by the Arabs.

What The Obama Administration Doesn’t Understand About The Middle East

Let’s turn over the mike to Yossi Klein Halevi:

Astonishingly, Obama is repeating the key tactical mistake of his failed efforts to restart Middle East peace talks over the last year. Though Obama’s insistence on a settlement freeze to help restart negotiations was legitimate, he went a step too far by including building in East Jerusalem. Every Israeli government over the last four decades has built in the Jewish neighborhoods of East Jerusalem; no government, let alone one headed by the Likud, could possibly agree to a freeze there. Obama made resumption of negotiations hostage to a demand that could not be met. The result was that Palestinian leaders were forced to adjust their demands accordingly.

Israeli Politics Made Simple

If Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu backs off of building new housing developments in East Jerusalem, his government will fall.

Because the Prime Minister doesn’t want to have his government fall, he won’t back off in response to the Obama Administration’s public denigration efforts.

If the Obama Administration wants to convince the Prime Minister to back off, they will have to use private diplomacy, and throw a sweetener into the deal in order to make it easier for the Prime Minister’s government to survive.

Eric Cantor seems to know this, which is why his advice to the White House to back off in public ought to be listened to. Whether it actually will be listened to is an open question; as the Obama Administration has made clear in a little over a year in office, its actual ability to do foreign policy right is not nearly as great as was advertised during the 2008 Presidential campaign.

Biden in Israel

Yesterday’s announcement by the interior ministry that it has approved the building of 1,600 new housing units in Ramat Shlomo, a religious neighborhood in East Jerusalem, however, handed Israel’s hapless press corps nothing less than a full-blown diplomatic incident.

The Ongoing Andrew Sullivan Saga

It occurs to me that given his reply to Leon Wieseltier, in which Andrew Sullivan accused Wieseltier of not coming out and saying definitively whether he believes that Sullivan is an anti-Semite, a similar critique may be made of me, given that I passed over the question myself, and instead posed questions to Sullivan that weren’t quite answered (whether that is because Sullivan did not see my post, or did see the post and decided not to answer the questions, I cannot say).

Something Much More Unresponsive

Speaking of Andrew Sullivan, he has posted a long reply to Leon Wieseltier, whose article I linked to.

Andrew Sullivan’s Got Some ‘Splainin’ To Do

Accusations of anti-Semitism are serious things, so I am not going to make them. But after reading this piece by Leon Wieseltier on Andrew Sullivan, I have some questions which I would love to see the Inspector Javert of Trig Palin’s matrilineal line answer.

Foreign Policy Crises

They can sneak up on the leadership class of any particular country in very unexpected ways.

The Eternal Question

Why does Andrew Sullivan still have a job with the Atlantic?

Seriously?

Reading this, one cannot help but to cringe in embarrassment.

Dispatch From Israel: 2010, Maybe

Predicting the future in this part of the world is a fool’s game, but there have always been more than enough of us willing to play it, and to a certain extent we don’t have any choice in the matter. Indeed, the only thing that it is truly safe to say about the Middle East in 2010 is that it will probably be the same as it has always been: Locked into an unstable but workable status quo that could be blown apart at any minute by essentially unpredictable forces.

- March 21, 2010 -

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