(The idea for this piece comes from a reader)
The Boston
Globe has an opinion-piece about Israel’s Prime Minister (“Benjamin
Netanyahu goes too far”, January 23, 2015). The essay doesn’t criticize him. It
attacks him personally.
It blames him
for ‘blind-siding’ the US President by accepting an invitation to speak to
Congress. It describes him as a man who has repeatedly gone out of his way to stick
‘his finger in the President’s eye’. It claims his behaviour reveals an “ingratitude
and hubris rarely seen before in the annals of the US-Israel bilateral
relationship.”
For this Boston
Globe essay, Netanyahu’s ungratefulness seems to know no limit. For example,
Netanyahu had the gall to refuse to obey America’s demand for ‘a
settlement freeze’. He had the effrontery to deliver “an infamous ‘history
lesson’ to Obama in the Oval Office in 2011 on the security challenges facing
Israel.” He didn’t just criticize a 2013 US-Iran nuclear agreement. He “disparaged”
it. He rejected a wonderful agreement the US had completed for Israel’s benefit.
In this
essay, Netanyahu looks like a man who bites the hand that helps him.
The essay
makes Netanyahu look unprincipled for ‘disparaging’ that agreement. That’s strange
because last year, the Boston Globe itself had sung a different song. It
wrote that many in the US Congress feared this Iran deal was more a ‘bad deal’ than
a good one (“Nuclear deal could reset US-Iran relations”, November 19, 2014).
So why do we
now see this attack on Netanyahu? More
to our point, why is that attack so personal?
This Boston
Globe attack sees Netanyahu’s rejection of the Iran agreement as a kind of personal
betrayal aimed specifically at President Obama. It’s a strange accusation. At
the time that deal was made—when Netanyahu expressed such distaste for it--some
at the prestigious Brookings Institute in the US essentially agreed with him (“Brookings
Scholars Weigh In On The Nuclear Deal With Iran”, Brookings, November
28, 2013): the deal quite literally scared the Saudis, would intensify violence
in the Middle East and left the players in the Middle East feeling bewildered
and likely angered (ibid).
Netanyahu’s
response to the deal wasn’t ‘ingratitude’. It wasn’t betrayal. It was realistic,
especially when one considered Middle East geopolitical realities. The Saudis
were potentially just as upset as Netanyahu. Why was the Boston Globe suddenly
attacking only Netanyahu over Iran?
Well, on
January 20, 2015, the US President drew an Iran line in the sand. He announced
during his State of the Union address that he would veto any legislative
attempt to impose new sanctions against Iran.
The very
next day, January 21, 2015, House of Representatives (Republican) Speaker John
Boehner gave two responses to that threat. First, he said of the President, “He
expects us [Congress] to stand idly by and do nothing while he cuts a bad deal
with Iran. Two words: 'Hell no!' …We're going to do no such thing" (“Boehner,
White House Clash Over Netanyahu Invite”, National Journal, January 21,
2015).
Boehner’s
second response was to send an invitation to Israel Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu to speak before a joint session of Congress about the ‘grave threat
of radical Islam and Iran’ (“White House: Boehner’s Invitation To Netanyahu Was
A “Breach Of Protocol,” BuzzfeedNews, January 21, 2015).
In
Washington, everyone knows that Netanyahu believes that Iran’s nuclear program
is extremely dangerous to world peace. Everyone knows that Obama disagrees with
Netanyahu. Everyone also knows that Obama wants to stamp out any effort to become
harsh with Iran.
John Boehner
believes Iran is dangerous. Does he have no right to seek help to make that
case?
Pro-President
advocates believe that Boehner has no such right. What he did, they say, is “unprecedented.
It's hitting below the belt. It's taking partisanship to a whole new level…It
is a way for [Republicans] to embarrass and humiliate the Obama
administration" just as they, the Republicans, prepare to dig in against
the President (“Boehner's Netanyahu Invite Is An 'Unprecedented' Diss Of Obama”,
TPM DC, January 21, 2015).
Democrats were
furious at Boehner. But then, it was Netanyahu who was savaged: a news story
broke immediately that Netanyahu’s own Mossad (intelligence Agency) disagreed
with him over sanctions.
This story was
an attack against Netanyahu. It made him look like he couldn’t control his own
Intelligence Agency. It claimed that a Mossad leader had told US officials that,
in fact, more sanctions would “tank the Iran nuclear negotiations”, (“Israeli
Mossad Goes Rogue, Warns U.S. on Iran Sanctions”, Bloomberg News,
January 21, 2015).
The next day
Israel got angry. It said the story was completely false (“Fury in Israel Over
Obama's Mossad 'Lies'”, Arutz Sheva).
Israeli
officials were furious. They had reviewed the minutes of the meeting the Mossad
head had attended. There was nothing in those minutes to substantiate the leaked
story.
Then, there
was the matter of secrecy. "Leaking the Mossad Head's statements, even if
they had not been falsified, is a serious breach of all the rules,” [a senior
Israeli said]. “Friends do not behave like this. Information from a secret
meeting must not leak out” (ibid).
The next
day, January 23, 2015, we saw where all of this was going: Netanyahu (not
Boehner) was going to be ‘punished’ for ‘disrespect’ (“The White House Makes It
Clear That Netanyahu Will Pay For Disrespecting President Obama”, PoliticusUSA,
January 23, 2015). It seems that some ‘unnamed US officials’ saw Netanyahu’s
accepting the Boehner invitation as ‘spitting’ in the President’s face—and for
that, he would pay a price (“US Says Netanyahu Will Pay ‘Price’ for Upcoming
Visit; Obama and Kerry Refuse to Meet Israeli PM”, United with Israel,
January 23, 2015).
That’s
strange. Several months ago, an ‘unnamed Administration official’ was reported
to have called Netanyahu ‘a chickens**t’ (“Senior Obama official: Israeli PM
Netanyahu is 'chicken[s-ip]'”, freerepublic, October 28, 2014). Now, an ‘unnamed
official’ claims that Netanyahu shows disrespect for Obama?
One of the
first manifestations of the ‘price’ for that ‘disrespect’ was the Boston
Globe attack (above): Netanyahu isn’t a real ally. Instead, he’s a selfish ingrate
who betrays all the good things President Obama has done for him. He spits in
the President’s face. He sticks his finger in the President’s eye. He accepts
invitations he shouldn’t accept.
This story isn’t
about diplomacy. It isn’t about foreign policy. For the US, it’s about respect.
Is this what the debate over Iran is about--respect for the US President?
This
invitation incident has provoked some very disrespectful behaviour indeed. The
US Administration seems so intent to stifle opposition to the President’s Iran
policy, it will turn ugly to get its way: it will falsify secret conversations.
It will make public a secret interview. It will have friends call an ally ‘an ingrate’.
It will convert legitimate diplomatic differences into a question of ‘respect’
for the US President.
The US sends
a message. If you disagree with me in public, I will smear you.
The US makes
the word, ‘’Superpower’ look ugly. It makes a great office look venal.
No wonder the
US loses its prestige.
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