Archive for September 15, 2012

Carney: Protests not directed at the United States | Washington Free Beacon

September 15, 2012

Carney: Protests not directed at the United States | Washington Free Beacon.

‘This is not a case of protests directed at the United States writ large or at U.S. policy, this is in response to a video that is offensive to Muslims’

 

 

September 14, 2012 11:59 am

White House press secretary Jay Carney said Friday the violent protests throughout the Middle East are not directed at the United States or U.S. policy but are a response to a YouTube video:

 

CARNEY: We also need to understand that this is a fairly volatile situation and it is in response not to United States policy, and not to, obviously, the administration, or the American people, but it is in response to a video, a film that we have judged to be be reprehensible and disgusting. That in no way justifies any violent reaction to it, but this is not a case of protests directed at the United States writ large or at U.S. policy, this is in response to a video that is offensive to Muslims.

 

Again, this is not in any way justifying violence, and we have spoken very clearly out against that and condemned it. And the president is making sure in his conversations with leaders around the region that they are committed as hosts to diplomatic facilities to protect both personnel and buildings and other facilities that are part of the U.S. representation in those countries.

 

The protests which began earlier this week have expanded rapidly across the Middle East on Friday.

 

Protesters attacked the U.S. Embassies in Tunis and Sudan; Tunisian protesters smashed windows and lit fires inside the embassy compound, while gunfire could be heard. Images of a dark column of smoke over the Tunisian site have circulated on the Internet Friday.

 

According to a page on the State Department’s website describing what an embassy is, an attack on an embassy is considered an attack on that country.

 

“Because an embassy represents a sovereign state, any attack on an embassy is considered an attack on the country it represents,” the page reads.

Al-Qaeda urges Muslims: Kill US diplomats over anti-Islam film

September 15, 2012

Al-Qaeda urges Muslims: Kill US diplomats over anti-Islam film – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Muslim community’s rage over film mocking Prophet Mohammad refuses to wane as protests reach Australia. Al-Qaeda’s Yemen-based branch urges future violence against US diplomats in retribution

News agencies

Published: 09.15.12, 10:46 / Israel News

The Yemen-based branch of al Qaeda urged Muslims to step up protests and kill more US diplomats in Muslim countries after a US-made film mocking the Prophet Mohammad which it said was another chapter in the “crusader wars” against Islam.

“Whoever comes across America’s ambassadors or emissaries should follow the example of Omar al-Mukhtar’s descendants, who killed the American ambassador,” the group said, referring to Tuesday’s attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya, which claimed the lives of US Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other members of the US mission.

“Let the step of kicking out the embassies be a step towards liberating Muslim countries from the American hegemony,” a statement posted on the group’s website on Saturday said.

Also on Saturday, hundreds of Muslims protested against “Muslim Innocence,” in central Sydney, Australian media reported Saturday.

Crowds gathered outside the United States Consulate in New South Wales, and spread from there.

According to ABC Australia, angry scenes erupted in central Sydney as hundreds of Muslims protest against the film.

The wave of protests spread to Sydney’s CBD this afternoon, beginning outside the United States Consulate and spreading through the city’s streets to Hyde Park.

According to the report, the protest’s organizers fanned the flames by sending a mass text message saying: “We must defend the honor of our prophet, we must act now.”

Anti-US protest in Iran (Photo: AFP)

The group was made up of Muslim men, women and children of all ages.

Some of the protesters were carrying banners reading “Behead those who insult the Prophet,” and shouting “Down, down USA,” and “Our dead are in paradise. Your dead are in hell.”

Sydney police tried to form a line in front of the demonstrators and use used pepper spray on protesters, who were throwing objects and bottles of water at the officers.

Sydney’s Ambulance Service said paramedics treated at least one person with head injuries.

“We are sick and tired of everyone mocking our beloved Prophet,” protester Houda Dib said. “They have no right to mock our Prophet. We don’t go around mocking anyone’s religion.”

One speaker called for calm, saying the aim of their protest had been to send a message.

“We are here for the sake of our God,” he said. “The message is clear, you cannot mock (the Prophet).”

Anti-US protest in Indonesia (Photo: AFP)

The Sydney protests followed a furious wave of anti-American violence across the Middle East and North Africa.

A crowd invaded the US embassy compound in Tunisia, and guards at the US embassy in Khartoum, Sudan, fired warning shots at protesters.

Fresh violence erupted in Yemen and Cairo and demonstrations took place in Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Pakistan, Iraq, Israel and the Gaza Strip, Morocco, Syria, Kuwait, Nigeria and Kenya.

At least six protesters died on Friday alone, and Washington deployed US Marines to protect its embassies in Libya and Yemen.

Reuters and AFP contributed to this report

Who’s naive?

September 15, 2012

Who’s naive? | Jerusalem Post – Blogs.

An Israeli should be careful in criticizing the United States.
One reason is pragmatic. The United States–like all the rulers of empires in the past–holds our fate in its hands. True, the United States does not aspire to rule in the fashion of Rome or latter day Britain, but the mixture of money and occasional military intervention minimizes the difference between aspirations to rule and aspirations to influence.
Another reason is intellectual honesty and fairness. It is wise to recognize America’s own hierarchy of interests. “Its the economy, stupid” (Bill Clinton) and “All politics are local” (Tip O”Neil) represent two important caveats vital to our understanding.
America’s distance from the Middle East has shrunk a great deal since the inspiration of the Marine hymn (From the Halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli). However, it remains far away There can be no doubt that their local economy is far more important to Americans than a potential Iranian threat from somewhere over the horizon.
Occasionally the Iranian rulers curse America, but the focus of their enmity is Israel. Even American Jews weigh their own livelihood or their feelings about things American (environment, equality, health) higher than their feelings for Israel and its Jews. The vast majority of other Americans think of Israel positively, especially in the case of the Christian Right, but there are those who applaud the near majority (or clear majority) of convention delegates who booed the inclusion of the Jerusalem plank in the Democrats’ platform.
With all that being said, Americans like Israelis (I am both) are entitled, and even encouraged, to be critical.
What provokes this note is what may be the unleashing of Arab winter against the background of American naivete 18 months ago with what then was viewed as the onset of Arab spring and the coming of democracy.
The thread of intellectual and political innocence stretches from Barack Obama’s call for democracy in his Cairo speech of 2009, then applauding the fall of dictators and pushing old friend Hosni Mubarak under the bus, to Hillary Clinton’s expression of amazement this week in response to the murder of American diplomats in Benghazi, “How could this happen in a country we helped liberate?”
Hillary’s comment has gone viral on Israeli media, along with ridicule. One popular personality, a member of the community that has been in the Middle East since leaving Spain, speaking Ladino, Arabic, and Hebrew, asked “If she doesn’t understand that, what else doesn’t she understand?”
The “how could this happen” is that things have not changed. The culture of the Muslim Middle East, infused by religious dogma and incited by the dominant clerics and most of the rulers is suspicion quickly turned to anger and violence toward all who would challenge the faith. That a crude film created by a marginal fringe of Christian fanatics could produce this wave of violence testifies to the distance between what is comprehensible to Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and the reality from Morocco eastward.
The massive detours on Arab spring’s march to democracy suggest that strong leadership, or one or another kind of dictatorship, is essential for keeping Muslim rage bottled up.
The best commentary I have seen on this point comes from Professor Eyal Zisser.
“Close to two years after the onset of Arab Spring the Arab masses found themselves a new-old target for their anger and frustration, which did not disappear or even lessen with the fall of dictators, but appears to have grown and become more powerful.”
(For a somewhat different version in English, click on this)
There are minority voices in Islam, and most Muslims may not share in the fanaticism. I can say with honesty that some of my best friends are Muslims, with whom I share political conversations and note our agreements and differences, without any sense of animosity. However, they do not balance the mobs who are attacking American installations while screaming their hatred of Americans, Israelis, and other infidels.
I have signed off on an excellent dissertation, written by a Palestinian about Israel and Arabs. I would welcome the day that he could invite me to lecture in his classes at Birzeit University. That will not happen anytime soon, if at all.
It is easy to understand Americans and Europeans who shy away from a criticism of Islam. The best reason is pragmatic. Why incite further animosity and violence when one’s own societies already have large Muslim minorities, more are coming every day, and important countries are dominated by Muslims?
It is also the case that the problem is not so much Islam as Muslims. The nuance is subtle, but important. The doctrines of Islam overlap those of Judaism and Christianity. Each has humane expressions along with those hateful of others. Yet the prevailing Islamic culture, inspired by most of the prominent clerics and shared by a great many Muslims is one that aspires to dominance in the region if not worldwide, and is violent toward those standing in the way.
The Obama-Clinton perspective appears to go beyond pragmatism to naivete bordering on ignorance. When Obama encouraged democracy in Cairo, and received a Nobel Peace Prize for his effort, he made a small or large contribution to what became Arab spring.
Dreaming of democracy in Muslim countries may be admirable and understandable among Americans, but expecting it is dangerous. Now it is necessary to mourn and replace four diplomats, repair and reinforce several American embassies and consulates.
Some see indications of learning in the most recent Obama comment that Egypt governed by the Muslim Brotherhood, “is not an ally and not an enemy.”
The Economist enters this fray with an item that remains optimistic about Arab spring, but also notes
“The slaying of Mr Stevens is hardly the only recent example of Arab dysfunction. Just to take the seven days prior to the killing: in Iraq scores of people were killed in bombings on one day and the vice-president was sentenced to death in absentia for alleged murder; in Yemen the defence minister survived an assassination attempt; in the Gaza Strip Israel killed six militants; in Tunisia extremist Salafists smashed up a bar that serves alcohol to the town where the Arab spring began; and most graphically of all, in Syria the death toll in the gruesome civil war continued to rise exponentially—to over 25,000.”
After this paragraph, I can only wonder about the newspaper’s optimistic urging of America to keep up with its promotion of democracy. I also note that there is no mention of a role for its own government.
Still pending is that elephant about 1500 kilometers east of here. For Americans unfamiliar with distant geography, that’s less than a thousand miles, or something like Chicago to New York.
Tensions, sharp comments and unpleasant silence between Bibi and Barack suggest to some that the American might want to throw us under the bus. Israelis disagree among ourselves about the wisdom of Netanyahu’s politics. Some think he belongs under a bus. For a good commentary on Bibi and Barack, click here.
As I understand the media, the people I meet, my principal advisor, confidant and critic who some of you know as Varda, and my own wandering thoughts, we will not go quietly under any bus to please Americans who aspire to peace and quiet. We may even succeed in dragging Americans with us wherever we go.
I may be overloading the tolerance of friends, relatives, and others for these commentaries. View these as my therapy in the face of tension, as well as the best I can do to sort through what I hear and read. I write primarily for myself. Others are free to ignore, delete, or comment.

The reign of imagination

September 15, 2012

Column One: The reign of imaginat… JPost – Opinion – Columnists.

09/13/2012 21:50
Did US Ambassador Christopher Stevens understand why he and his fellow Americans were being murdered?

US Consulate in Benghazi in flames during protest Photo: reuters

As he suffocated to death at the US Consulate in Benghazi on the 11th anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the US, did US Ambassador Christopher Stevens understand why he and his fellow Americans were being murdered? From what we have learned of this man since he was killed, it is clear that he was extremely courageous. He stole into Benghazi in April 2011 on a cargo ship to serve as chief US liaison officer to the rebel forces fighting Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi. He did the business of the US government in makeshift offices and moved from safe house to safe house under what can only be considered dire conditions of combat.

But did he understand the forces he was unleashing? Stevens arrived in Benghazi at an early phase of US involvement in the rebellion against Gaddafi, a former US foe who had been neutered since 2004. But even then it was clear that the rebels with whom he worked included jihadist fighters associated with al-Qaida. Their significance became obvious when just after the regime fell in November 2011, rebel forces foisted the flag of al-Qaida over the courthouse in Benghazi.

Did Stevens understand what this meant? Perhaps he did. But his boss, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, certainly didn’t. Following Tuesday’s attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi, Clinton said, “Today, many Americans are asking – indeed, I asked myself – how could this happen? How could this happen in a country we helped liberate, in a city we helped save from destruction? This question reflects just how complicated and, at times, how confounding the world can be.”

Clinton, the bewildered stewardess of US foreign policy, then proclaimed with utter certainty that there is nothing to be concerned about. “We must be clear-eyed, even in our grief. This was an attack by a small and savage group – not the people or government of Libya,” she said.

Of course, what she failed to mention was that after the rebels felled Gaddafi’s regime – with US support – they began imposing Islamic law over large swathes of the country.

Clinton was not the only senior US official who didn’t understand why Stevens and three other Americans were murdered or why the US Consulate in Benghazi was reduced to a smoldering ruin.

Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, thinks that the party responsible for the Muslim violence against the US on the anniversary of September 11 is a kook in Florida who enjoys saying nasty things about Islam.

The day after the murderous assault on the US Consulate in Benghazi, and in the face of an ongoing mob assault on the US Embassy in Cairo, and on US embassies in Yemen and Tunis, Dempsey called Pastor Terry Jones in Florida and asked him to withdraw his support for a film that depicts Muhammad in a negative fashion.

Dempsey’s spokesman Col. Dave Lapan told Reuters, “In a brief call, Gen. Dempsey expressed his concerns over the nature of the film, the tensions it will inflame and the violence it will cause. He asked Mr. Jones to consider withdrawing his support for the film.”

Dempsey’s belief that a third-rate riff on Muhammad supported by a marginal figure in Florida is the cause of the terrorist attacks on US embassies is not simply shocking. It is devastating.

It means that the senior officer in the US military is of the opinion that the party to blame for the assaults on US government installations overseas was an American pastor. To prevent the recurrence of such incidents, freedom of speech must be constrained.

And Dempsey is not the only senior US military commander who harbors this delusion.

A similar response was voiced by Gen. George Casey, the US Army chief of staff, in the wake of the massacre of US forces at Ft. Hood in November 2009 by Maj. Nidal Malik Hassan. Hassan, who had been in contact with al-Qaida commander Anwar al-Awlaki and described himself as a “soldier of Islam,” was clearly acting out of Islamic jihadist motivations when he shot his fellow soldiers.

And yet, responding to the attack, Casey said that worse than the massacre itself – that is more sacred than the lives of his own soldiers – was the notion that “our diversity” should fall casualty to Hassan’s murderous attack. In his words, “Our diversity not only in our army, but in our country, is a strength. And as horrific as this tragedy was, if our diversity becomes a casualty, I think that’s worse.”

A word about the much mentioned film about Muhammad is in order. The film was apparently released about a year ago. It received little notice until last month when a Salafi television station in Egypt broadcast it.

In light of the response, the purpose of the broadcast was self-evident. The broadcasters screened the film to incite anti-American violence.

Had they not been interested in attacking the US, they would not have screened the film.

They sought a pretext for attacking America. If the film had never been created, they would have found another – equally ridiculous – pretext.

And here we come to the nature of the attacks against America that occurred on the 11th anniversary of the September 11 jihadist attacks.

A cursory consideration of the events that took place – and are still taking place – makes clear that these were not acts of spontaneous rage about an amateur Internet movie. They were premeditated. In Egypt, the mob attack on the embassy followed the screening of the anti-Islam flick on jihadist television. It was led by Muhammad al-Zawahiri – the brother of al-Qaida chief Ayman al-Zawahiri.

The US’s first official response to the assault on its embassy in Cairo came in the form of a Twitter feed from the embassy apologizing to Muslims for the film.

The day before the attacks, al-Qaida released a video of Ayman al-Zawahiri in which he called for his co-religionists to attack the US in retribution for the killing – in June – of his second in command Abu Al Yahya al-Libi by a US drone in Pakistan.

Zawahiri specifically asked for the strongest act of retribution to be carried out in Libya.

As for the attack in Libya, in an online posting the night before he was killed, US Foreign Service information management officer Sean Smith warned of the impending strike. Smith wrote, “Assuming we don’t die tonight. We saw one of our ‘police’ that guard the compound taking pictures.”

The coordinated, premeditated nature of the attack was self-evident. The assailants were armed with rocket-propelled grenades and machine guns. They knew the location of the secret safe house to which the US consular officials fled. They laid ambush to a Marine force sent to rescue the 37 Americans hiding at the safe house. And yet, Clinton and Dempsey either could not fathom why the attack occurred, or blamed an irrelevant pastor in Florida.

Like Dempsey, the US media were swift to focus the blame for the attacks on the film. The New York Times was quick to report – falsely – that the film’s creator was an Israeli Jew. It took an entire day for that bit of misinformation to be dispelled. But the campaign to blame the attacks on the movie creators continued.

By Wednesday afternoon the media shifted the focus of discussion on the still ongoing attacks from the film to an all-out assault on Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney. Romney became the target of media attention for his temerity in attacking as “disgraceful” the administration’s initial apologetic response to the attack on the embassies.

Following the September 11 attacks, the US Congress formed the bipartisan 9/11 Commission and charged it with determining the causes of the assault and recommending a course of action for the government to follow to prevent such attacks from happening again. It took the commission members nearly three years to finish their report. In the end, they claimed that the chief failure enabling the attacks was “one of imagination.”

Unfortunately for the US, the commissioners had things backwards. It wasn’t that imagination failed America before September 11. It was that imagination reigned in America. And it still does.

It’s just that the land of make-believe occupied by the US foreign policy elite has shifted.

Until September 11, 2001, the US foreign policy elite was of the opinion that the chief threat to US national security was the fact that the US was a “hyperpower.”

That is, the chief threat to the US was the US itself. After September 11, the US decided that the main threat to the US was “terror,” against which the US declared war. The perpetrators of terrorism were rarely mentioned, and when they were they were belittled as “marginal forces.”

Those forces, of course are anything but marginal.

The Islamic ideology of jihad is the predominant ideology in the Muslim world today.

The rallying cry of al-Qaida – the shehada – is the cry of Muslim faith. Jihadist Islam is the predominant form of Islam worshiped in mosques throughout the world. And the ideology of jihad is an ideology of war against the non-Islamic world led by the US.

Then-president George W. Bush and his administration imagined a world where the actual enemies of the US were marginal forces in Islam. They then determined – based on nothing – that the masses of the Muslim world from Gaza to Iraq to Afghanistan and beyond were simply Jeffersonian democrats living under the jackboot.

If freed from tyranny, they would become liberal democrats nearly indistinguishable from regular Americans.

With President Barack Obama’s inauguration, the imaginary world inhabited by the American foreign policy elite shifted again. Obama and his advisers agree that jihadist Islam is the predominant force in the Muslim world. But in their imaginary world, jihadist Islam is a good thing for America.

Hence, Turkish Prime Minister Recip Erdogan is Obama’s closest confidante in the Middle East despite his transformation of Turkey from a pro- Western secular republic into a pro-Iranian Islamic republic in which secularists are jailed without trial for years on end.

Hence Israel – the first target of jihadist Islam’s bid for global supremacy – is strategic burden rather than an ally to the US.

Hence the US abandoned its most stalwart ally in the Arab world, Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, and supported the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to power in the most strategically vital state in the Arab world.

Hence it supported a Libyan rebel force penetrated by al-Qaida.

Hence it is setting the stage for the reinstitution of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

It is impossible to know the thoughts that crossed Stevens’ mind as he lay dying in Benghazi. But what is clear enough is that as long as imagination reigns supreme, freedom will be imperiled.

caroline@carolineglick.com

Postscript: Israel’s Iran debacle

September 15, 2012

Postscript: Israel’s Iran debacle – JPost – Opinion – Columnists.

By HIRSH GOODMAN

 

09/14/2012 07:07
The story of the unfolding of Israel’s current Iran debacle started with the former head of the Mossad, Meir Dagan.

Dagan

Photo: Marc Israel Sellem

If I were an ayatollah I would be rubbing my hands with glee. Israel’s relationship with the United States is teetering on crisis; Europe’s leaders, led by Angela Merkel of Germany, the same country that provided Israel with nuclear-capable submarines just recently, are furious; Israel’s prime minister and defense minister are at each other’s throats, as are other members of the Israeli cabinet, often with microphones in front of their mouths; day after day Israel’s major papers publish more and more details of Israel’s strategic thinking on the Iranian issue, while the never ending flow of Iranian-related verbiage put out by pundits, many fresh out of uniform or the civil service, just adds to the general confusion.

If the ayatollah in question had been with me at a bar mitzva just the other week, he would have been even more delighted to hear several young couples with an assortment of young children between them, discussing whether or not the responsible thing to do as parents would be to leave the country for a while. The weekend papers and Friday night TV commentators had certainly left an impression of pending war, and who knew what the crazy Iranians and their Hezbollah and Hamas allies would do in response.

For years Israel’s message to the world has been that a nuclear Iran was not only Israel’s problem, but the world’s problem. A tremendous effort was made to fortify this point, and not without success. Iran has been placed under an international sanctions regime and the American president is publicly pledged to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. The Iranians have come under closer international scrutiny, Canada has cut ties with the country and the secretary-general of the United Nations, in Tehran of all places, ridiculed and condemned Iran’s behavior toward Israel, the Jews and the Holocaust.

But then everything became unraveled.

Instead of Israel standing on the side lines watching while the world, at its urging, dealt with the Iranian problem, it is now back on center stage.

Instead of international cooperation, we now have international recrimination.

Instead of Israel and its allies having their collective eye on the ball, they now watch each other. How did this all come about?

The story of the unfolding of Israel’s current Iran debacle is simple, but quite unbelievable. It started with the former head of the Mossad, Meir Dagan, who decided to brief a group of senior journalists before leaving his post after eight years and three prime ministers as Israel’s top spymaster. The meeting was held in Dagan’s office, an extremely unlikely location for a media event, just before his successor, Tamir Pardo, was slated to take over on January 1, 2011.

Dagan’s message to the reporters was stunning: The Israeli public, he is quoted as saying, could trust neither the prime minister nor the defense minister on the Iranian issue; that the two men were going to lead Israel on a senseless path of war by irresponsibly bombing the Iranian nuclear reactors, and that Israeli military and security leadership was too weak to oppose them.

He then told the world on CBS’s prime-time 60 Minutes program that bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities was the “stupidest idea” he had ever heard, and went on to give a long series of interviews on and off the record, just to make sure that the entire world understood that Israel’s current leadership could not be trusted to do the right thing.

Dagan’s motives have been a subject of speculation for months. Some say he felt he had to speak out to prevent a catastrophe, or at least postpone it.

Others say that it was political, sour grapes over not having Binyamin Netanyahu extend his term, or that he genuinely believed that the war against Iran’s nuclear program is best fought covertly. Whatever his motive, the net result was the seed of today’s bitter harvest, his campaign eagerly being taken up by those elements of the Israeli media that are happy to do anything to bring Netanyahu down, which means most of it, but not for the reasons you may all think.

Netanyahu made a serious enemy of Yediot Aharonot, the country’s largest and most influential paper, when he urged gambling billionaire Sheldon Adelson to open Israel HaYom, a blatantly pro-government daily giveaway, that has taken a serious bite out of Yediot’s circulation and advertising revenues and never has to show a profit. Yediot also has a substantial share in Channel 2, the independent network, giving it yet another medium to slam the prime minister whenever possible.

So when the former head of the Mossad, the man who led Israel’s secret war against Iran’s nuclear program for eight years, a national hero and father of the Stuxnet virus, says Netanyahu and Ehud Barak cannot be trusted, for Yediot it is like manna from heaven; something to be headlined and played up, no matter what the consequences for public morale, Israel’s international reputation and its ability to deter its enemies.

How can any responsible figure, no matter what his motives, have knowingly started a chain reaction he knew would lead to the world believing that Israel is in the hands of men who are not to be trusted and bureaucrats and generals too weak to oppose them.

The vibe the media put out, with Yediot at the helm, was that the Israeli public would do well to prepare the shelters and run for gas masks. There were reports from “experts” that “at worst” there would be “only” 300 to 500 dead in the event of an Iranian response, not counting possible damage from Hezbollah’s impressive arsenal of tens of thousands of rockets and missiles, and from Hamas down south.

We have been the architects of our own downfall once again. For once we had most of the world on board, but instead allowing ever-tightening sanctions imposed on Iran by the international community to take their toll, we have gone into confrontation mode with our best friends and landed up arguing among ourselves while the Iranians continue to bury more centrifuges ever deeper into the ground.

How ironic, this all because of the poor judgment of a man this country thought it could trust most.

Hirsh Goodman is a journalist and author living in Jerusalem. His latest book, The Anatomy of Israel’s Survival, won the 2012 National Jewish book Award in the history category.

US media see Iran strike as transcending elections issues

September 15, 2012

US media see Iran strike as transcending elections issues – Israel News, Ynetnews.

NYT says leaders need ‘more than red lines,’ and Washington Post delves into Netanyahu’s ‘Hamlet-like anguishing’ over strike on Iran, as Israel-Iran tensions become pivotal issue in presidential race

Ynet

Published: 09.15.12, 09:07 / Israel News

As the presidential race in the United States gains momentum and differences between Israel and the US over the need of an immediate action vis-à-vis Iran’s nuclear ambitions grows, US media levels growing criticism at Israel’s demand of a “red line.”

A top commentator at the Washington Post urges US President Barack Obama to help Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “climb down from his unwise rhetoric”; and the New York Times asserts that “Leaders need flexibility and ambiguity, not just hard and fast red lines.”

David Ignatius of the Washington Post’s opinion piece, titled “Puzzled by a ‘red line’ demand,” wonders about Netanyahu’s “almost daily demands” for the US to set a clear red line for Iran, and asks “What he wants beyond what President Obama has already stated?”

Ignatius said that “Obama believes he has drawn the US red line as clearly as a superpower ever should.” He notes previous statements by Obama, saying that the US has a national security interest in preventing the Islamic Republic from achieving military nuclear capabilities.

He further notes that the Obama administration has already proved it plans to stop Iran by directing the US Armed forces to formulate a detailed plan of attack should Iran cross the US’ line.

Ignatius hedges that Netanyahu’s true aim is to see Obama issue a de-facto ultimatum or deadline for Iran to stop its nuclear enrichment.

“Watching Netanyahu’s public, Hamlet-like anguishing over the past year about ‘to bomb or not to bomb,’ one suspects the real issue for him isn’t red lines so much as trust that they will be enforced,” the Washington Post states.

The relations between the American president and the Israeli prime minister have often been strained and close associates on both sides say they are plagued by mutual mistrust both on a personal level and on a political one.

“Netanyahu should understand that no country can allow another to impose the conditions under which it will go to war,” Ignatius wrote. “Presidents don’t turn over that power of war and peace, even to their best friends.”

If both the US and Israel wish to maintain deterrence vis-à-vis Iran, “Obama should help the Israeli leader to climb down from his unwise rhetoric,” he states.

‘No Rush to War’

The New York Times’ editorial largely echoed that sentiment, further stressing that the United States should not rush to strike Iran, especially since there is a consensus among experts that such a strike could, at best, set the Iranian’s nuclear program back four years at most.

Netanyahu, the editorial states, is “Trying to browbeat President Obama into a preemptive strike,” further exacerbating the tensions between the close long-time allies.

“Leaders need flexibility and ambiguity, not just hard and fast red lines. And it is dangerous for Mr. Netanyahu to try to push the president into a corner publicly and raise questions about Washington. Is that really the message he wants to send to Tehran?” the New York Times wondered.

Israel has no reason to doubt Washington’s resolve on the Iranian threat.

But recent polls show that 70% of Americans oppose a unilateral strike on Iran, and 59% said that if a unilateral Israeli strike on Iran ignites a regional war, the United States should not come to its ally’s aid.

The editorial asserts that “The best strategy is for Israel to work with the United States and other major powers to tighten sanctions while pursuing negotiations on a deal. It is a long shot, but there is time to talk. And that’s where the focus must be.”

Netanyahu: What if the US does not intervene on Iran?

September 15, 2012

Israel Hayom | Netanyahu: What if the US does not intervene on Iran?.

In special interview with Israel Hayom to be published in full on Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismisses allegations that his insistence on red lines is impacting U.S. presidential race • Lieberman, Barak criticize PM for public discussion on Iran issue.

Shlomo Cesana and Hezi Sternlicht with additional reporting by Lilach Shoval
IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak raising a toast to the Jewish New Year on Thursday.Photo credit: Ariel Hermoni, Defense Ministry

Israel must ask itself what will happen if the U.S. fails to take action to stop Iran’s nuclear program, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Israel Hayom in a special Rosh Hashanah interview this week.

In the interview, to be published in full on Sunday, Netanyahu addressed recent assessments by top defense officials, who suggested that there is still time before action against Iran becomes necessary. “I hear all those people who say that we should wait until the very last minute. But what if the U.S. doesn’t intervene? That is a question we have to ask,” he said.

Netanyahu also dismissed allegations that his insistence on red lines, beyond which the U.S. would commit to taking military action against Iran, was impacting the presidential race currently underway in the U.S., saying, “This is nonsense because the issue that is guiding me is not the U.S. elections, but the centrifuges in Iran, and what can I do if the centrifuges in Iran are inconsiderate of the U.S. political timetable? If the Iranians were to hit the ‘pause’ button and halt their uranium enrichment and bomb preparation until after the elections, I would be able to wait.”

In addition, the prime minister explained that the gaps between Washington’s and Jerusalem’s stances on the Iranian issue revolve “not on a question of dates, but rather on a question of process.” Referring to homefront preparedness, Netanyahu said, “You can protect the country from missiles, in one way or another. But there is no protection against atomic bombs. The only way to protect against this is to prevent the creation of such a reality by the enemy, and of course, make it clear to anyone who would ever consider attacking Israel with weapons of mass destruction – do it at your own peril.”

Meanwhile, at an event in honor of the New Jewish Year this week, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said that any discussion about Iran should be conducted behind closed doors. His comments echoed statements made a day earlier by Defense Minister Ehud Barak who criticized Netanyahu’s call for the U.S. to set “red lines” on Iran.

It doesn’t matter who holds what opinion: whether you believe we should press on with sanctions, or that sanctions are ineffective; whether you think that we should progress to the next level or not — all the these dialogues and discussions should not be conducted in public and in the media,” Lieberman said. “There are enough forums and channels through which information can be exchanged; there is no need for explanations and public debates.”

The foreign minister added that “our relations with the U.S. are founded on shared values and a lot of friendship, both diplomatically and personally.”

During a tour of southern Israel on Thursday, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro also commented on reportedly strained relations between the two countries. “There is no crisis,” he said, adding that both countries have the “closest relations ever” in terms of security and strategic cooperation, and in their common goal of preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

Following a recent flurry of criticism voiced against Netanyahu by both Lieberman and Barak, as well as by the American publications The New York Times and The New Yorker, a source close to the prime minister said on Thursday that “Netanyahu’s sharp comments about Iran – even if they are not pleasant and seem direct – are necessary to create international pressure against Iran’s nuclear program.”

According to the source, “the prime minister is prepared to take the criticism. Experience shows that if Netanyahu would not have dared voice sharp remarks on Iran in public from time to time, there would not be this unprecedented international pressure on the Iranians.”

The source added that the prime minister believes setting clear red lines on Iran’s nuclear armament “is a vital interest to the State of Israel, and so he will continue to demand in a clear voice that the international community set this red line.”

Earlier Thursday, the prime minister held a gathering to mark the Jewish new year together with Defense Minister Barak, Israel Defense Forces Chief of General Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz and members of the General Staff Forum. During the gathering, Netanyahu said, “We live in an explosive and stormy region, and the explosions and storms are increasing. The strength of the IDF has helped ensure that we are an island of stability amidst the storms. From time to time, actions have been necessary and they were carried out with great success. Israeli citizens must know what I know — that we can rely on the IDF. There are those who know how to do the work. I wish the soldiers, commanders and their families a happy, sweet and safe Rosh Hashanah.”