Archive for April 6, 2014

Israel concerned of collapse of peace process in the near future

April 6, 2014

Israel concerned of collapse of peace process in the near future, Ynet News, Attila Somfalvi, April 6, 2014

(The position of the Obama Administration is still seen as relevant. Should it be? — DM)

Israeli officials say package deal offered to Palestinians to keep them at the negotiating table is no longer relevant, add Israel is readying to return to pre-talks routine.

. . . .

“We are noticing a real coolness in the way the Americans are treating (the peace process), and it’s obvious that today’s Kerry is not the same Kerry from a few weeks ago,” one of the officials said.

[Videos at the link]

Israel is gravely concerned the peace process will collapse completely in the very near future, Israeli officials said Sunday, but noted that efforts to reach some sort of understandings that would allow continuing talks continue.

While different Israeli officials familiar with the talks expressed slightly different positions, the overall tone of their comments was pessimistic.

“The way it’s looking now, the talks as they were several weeks ago are no longer relevant. Last week’s package deal (offered to the Palestinians) is now off the table and Israel is preparing to return to routine dealings with the Palestinians as they were before the negotiations started nine months ago,” one official said.

“As far as we’re concerned, the coordination on the ground with the different security forces continues, but the peace process is no longer relevant,” he added.

Despite that, the officials stressed that Israel was still waiting to see how the United States decides to act following US President Barack Obama’s meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry.

“We are noticing a real coolness in the way the Americans are treating (the peace process), and it’s obvious that today’s Kerry is not the same Kerry from a few weeks ago,” one of the officials said.

Another official said current talks are heading in a bad direction, but said he believed another chance needs to be given to Israeli chief negotiator Tzipi Livni’s efforts.

“We have to wait a few more days. The direction is not good, but I wouldn’t rush to call it a complete collapse of the talks. A lot of efforts are being done to salvage the situation,” he said.

Israel also clarified that despite punitive measures taken against the Palestinians following their decision to join UN agencies, it will refrain from making any moves that would significantly damage the Palestinian Authority’s economy, as that would hurt Israeli interests as well.

 

 

 

Iran ‘plotting in the back room’ for nuke talks failure, Menendez says

April 6, 2014

Iran ‘plotting in the back room’ for nuke talks failure, Menendez says, Jerusalem Post,  Michael Wilner, April 6, 2014

(Ineffective containment, not prevention, of Iranian nukes seems to be the P5+1 goal. As with the “peace process,” the process has become more important than its results. Is President Obama ignoring, or has he rejected, Senator Menendez’ views on both Israel and Iran? — DM)

At JPost Conference in New York, chief foreign policy senator warns international community wants “any deal” on the nuclear crisis “more than a good deal”; says “we are all conservative” on Israel’s Jewish character.

. . . .

“If past is prologue, I’m skeptical of Iran keeping its promises,” Menendez (D-NJ) said. “Based on the parameters described in the Joint Plan of Action, all I have heard in briefings, and recent Iranian actions— I am very concerned.”

[Video at the link]

WASHINGTON — Senator Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, expressed deep skepticism on Sunday that world powers will be able to forge a comprehensive agreement with Iran on its nuclear program.

The New Jersey Democrat and Senate foreign policy chief placed blame for those odds squarely on an “obfuscating” Iran— and on the international community for wanting “any deal” on the nuclear crisis “more than a good deal,” he said.

“If past is prologue, I’m skeptical of Iran keeping its promises,” Menendez (D-NJ) said. “Based on the parameters described in the Joint Plan of Action, all I have heard in briefings, and recent Iranian actions— I am very concerned.”

Speaking to The Jerusalem Post Annual Conference in New York on Sunday, Menendez issued his support for US President Barack Obama’s efforts to forge a lasting nuclear agreement— what Obama has called one of the two greatest foreign policy goals of his presidency, alongside the achievement of a peace accord between Israel and the Palestinians.

But Menendez, a veteran of the upper chamber who has worked on Iran policy for decades, is also the author of the latest sanctions bill against Iran that would have triggered new financial penalties against the Islamic Republic if negotiations expired this summer without a final deal.

Obama threatened to veto that bill in January, warning that its passage might fray the international consensus at the negotiating table amongst the P5+1— the US, United Kingdom, France, China, Russia and Germany— across from Iran.

Menendez defended the bill once again on Sunday. But he stopped short of renewing his call for a swift vote in the Senate. The bill has 59 cosponsors, but is unlikely to reach the floor for debate.

“Make no mistake,” Menendez said: “While they are smiling at our negotiators across the table, they are plotting in the back room.”

His harsh words on Iran extended beyond its nuclear program: “Iran-like fundamentalist theocracies bent on turning the clock back 500 years,” he said, should be “relegated to the dustbin” of history.

Negotiations between the P5+1 and Iran resume this week in Vienna.

Menendez, a Democrat, made a broad case for “conservative” policies on Israel and on the policy priorities shared between Israel and the United States.

That conservatism, according to Menendez, extends across party lines in Washington— most definitively on the issue of Israel’s character as the Jewish homeland.

“We are all conservative when it comes to Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state,” Menendez said. “We are all conservative when it comes to keeping the people of Israel safe and secure in their homes and within their borders.”

[Another video at the link]

Menendez last spoke extensively on Iran and the Middle East peace process at the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, where he opened for Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu.

The senator quoted Netanyahu’s AIPAC speech on Sunday, where the Israeli premiere said there can be ‘no fantasy of flooding Israel with refugees,” and “no movement to amputate parts of the Negev and the Galilee.'”

“Notwithstanding any hopes we may harbor, one thing is certain, set in stone: President Abbas must recognize the Jewish state as a Jewish state without equivocation,” Menendez charged, questioning whether the Palestinian Authority was a “committed partner” in the peace process.

Since taking over from John Kerry— who left his foreign relations chairmanship in the Senate to succeed Hillary Clinton as secretary of state— Menendez has put threats emanating from Syria and Iran front and center on Capitol Hill.

While Menendez holds the respect of the Obama administration, the senator is keen on proving the worth of the Senate on foreign policy, and considers the legislature an equal branch of government on affairs abroad.

Menendez underlined that message in his Sunday address. He repeatedly backed Obama’s approach to Iran, and reinforced his support for the president’s performance on Syria throughout the chemical weapons crisis that gripped the world last August. But he also took credit for the results of that policy: Bashar Assad’s signing of the Chemical Weapons Convention, and his agreeing to rid Syria of its massive stockpile of chemical arms.

“On Syria, my committee’s authorization for the use of military force last September was the reason— and the only reason, I am convinced— Assad agreed to dismantle and destroy his regime’s arsenal of chemical weapons,” Menendez said. “Our willingness to use our military power can be a force for positive change.”

Menendez spoke to a crowd of over 1,000 at the thirdJerusalem Post Annual Conference in Times Square in New York City.

 

Post mortem, perhaps a bit early

April 6, 2014

Post mortem, perhaps a bit early | Jerusalem Post – Blogs.

Ira Sharkansky

( Superb analysis… Don’t miss this. – JW )

John Kerry’s peace process is dying. Or it was born dead, despite having parents who praised its prospects.

 The fault is not Israel’s, nor Palestine’s, but John Kerry’s. Or maybe Barack Obama’s, due to his appointing a visionary for a job that is supposed to be serious.
Kerry’s various ideas join the collection amassed since the 1930s, resembling the jumble of the Jewish graveyard of Prague, with stones leaning one on the other and hardly room to set foot among them.
An item in the Washington Post called  the process a fool’s errand.
Israeli skeptics doubted Kerry’s chances from the beginning. Their numbers have grown. In recent days only the most die hard leftists and optimists have spoken of what Israel could do to bring about an agreement.
Given Jewish history, it should be no surprise that skepticism is part of Israel’s national culture.
Cynicism is a close cousin of skepticism, and the shallowness of Kerry and his American colleagues have provided ample reasons for disrespect, bordering on ridicule. Moshe Ya’alon is not the only Israeli to have described the US Secretary of State as messianic.
Among the faults of the Obama-Kerry team is investing a great deal of political capital in Israel-Palestine when other pressing issue seemed more capable of responding to American influence. Among them are soothing the ruffled feathers of Saudi Arabia, and getting back on track with Egypt. The Americans have also failed to lessen the carnage in Syria, or prevent continued bloodshed in Libya, Iraq, and Afghanistan. They have done little more than bluster with respect to Russia and the Ukraine, and do not seem likely to lessen the nuclear threats associated with Iran or North Korea.
Kerry has not only failed with respect to Israel and Palestine. He has made things worse.
After years of relative quiet and economic development in the West Bank, there has been an upsurge in violence. Rather than applause, Kerry and Obama will deserve condemnation for whatever Israeli and Palestinian deaths come from this.
At its heart, the failure reflects mutual distrust, derived principally from the lack of resolve among Palestinians to deal with Israel. It is not new, and has allowed a creeping spread of settlements that makes a Palestinian resolve to take what they can get even less likely.
Not too far in the background are the severe conflicts among Muslims, which–perhaps provoked by a visionary and naive American president–have erupted to new heights of casualties. What has come from Arab Spring make Israelis even more wary of helping to create another Muslim state, especially one that declares that it wants no Israeli residents.
The latest Palestinian demands do not make them more attractive. The list now includes a state with the borders of 1967, a capital in Jerusalem, no mention of giving up the rights of refugees, recognizing Israel as a Jewish state, or agreeing to end the conflict if those demands are accepted.
Abbas’ demands recall the comment of Chaim Herzog when he was Ambassador to the UN, and on the table was the resolution that Zionism is racism. Let is pass, Herzog advised at a certain point. It would be better to have something so extreme as to make it easy to ridicule and oppose.
The next step, according to what we hear from ranking Palestinians, will be accusations of war crimes.
Naftali Bennet has already announced, in response,  that he has begun to prepare a counter case against Abbas for sponsoring terror.
Initial sanctions have already been announced, against a cell phone company owned by Abbas’ son.
Israel will no longer allow the erection of antennae for the company.
How’s that for targeting the soft underbelly of Palestinian corruption, where concessions go to those well connected?
There is a lot else that Israel can do, given its control over Palestine’s borders.
Neither Kerry nor the principal Israeli or Palestinian negotiators have formally called an end to the process. Israeli commentators continue to ponder what can happen to bring them back to the table, at least till the end of the month, the end of the year, or the end of the Obama presidency. However, none see anything like an agreement that an Israeli government or Palestinian leadership would accept. The New York Times correspondent in Israel concludes that all sides have an interest in keeping the process going, even though none see it as going anywhere.
Tsipi Livni is betting her political career on yet another effort to restart the negotiations. She is demanding that the Palestinians retract their applications to join UN affiliated organizations, and accept the deal that Israel was about to offer. She criticized the Minister of Housing and Construction for announcing a new building project that triggered the Palestinians breaking off the negotiations and turning to the UN. However, that project is in the neighborhood of Gilo, which has been part of Jerusalem for nearly half a century. With Livni seeming to accept the Palestinian (and American) conception that neighborhoods of Jerusalem should be labeled “settlements,” she is not strengthening her position among other members of the Israeli government.
It is not clear if Pollard remains on the table, or if Israel would agree to release Israeli Arabs in the list of prisoners that Abbas demands.
Among the charges against John Kerry is that he failed to make clear to the Palestinians that Israel had not agreed to release Israeli Arab prisoners. The issue is important to members of the government, who see it as defining a crucial line between Palestinian aspirations and Israeli sovereignty.
Kerry has said that he remains committed to the process, but that he will consider with the President whether the United States should continue with its heavy role in the Middle East.
Kerry’s career may depend on keeping this going, and neither Israeli nor Palestinians want to offend Uncle.
The most likely prospect is that Americans and others will have to tolerate the anomaly of a stateless people. Those in the West Bank live as well or better than the average throughout the Middle East. They invest, receive investments from the Palestinian diaspora, improve their living standards and travel internationally. Those of Gaza have less reason to be happy, reflecting the greater extremism of their leadership.
Humanitarians will screech at us, but their day may have passed.
Israel is not alone as a developed country that must cope with troublesome neighbors.
Various European countries are getting tougher with illegal migrants. Australia tows them to unpleasant quarters on distant islands. The US is buffering its border with Mexico.
America’s internal problems are well known. Drugs, crime, violence, and guns for protection against all of that, with the world’s highest incidence of incarcerated people. Americans may criticize Israel for its failure to make peace with the Palestinians, but Americans have not had any better results with their own citizens.

Thomas Friedman says Sheldon Adelson is ‘Iran’s best ally’

April 6, 2014

Thomas Friedman says Sheldon Adelson is ‘Iran’s best ally’ | JPost | Israel News.

( Friedman seems intent on shedding whatever remnant of credibility he still holds. – JW )

By JPOST.COM STAFF

 04/06/2014 09:58

New York Times columnist says that by staunchly supporting the “occupation” of the West Bank, Adelson is unintentionally leading to Israel’s demise.

Thomas Friedman Sheldon Adelson

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman (L) and US casino magnate Sheldon Adelson. Photo: REUTERS

 The recent debacle over New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie calling the West Bank the “occupied territories” at pro-Israel billionaire Sheldon Adelson’s Las Vegas conference only fuels the Palestinian cause and ensures Israel’s continued isolation, according to New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman.

The fact that Christie felt he had to apologize to Adelson in person would make Iranian Supreme Leader Khamenei very happy, Friedman says, because the more Adelson tries to control government policy on Israel, the more Israel and its powerful supporters look like the “bad guys.”

Iran would love nothing more than to watch Israel be destroyed by way of international public opinion and disdain, he says. Sheldon Adelson and his mission to financially control the US government’s official line on the West Bank is only speeding up the process, he writes.

By using his billions to sway politicians towards what he sees as protecting Israel, Adeldon is actually hurting its cause, Friedman says. Adelson is “loving Israel to death.”

“Now Iran has an ally: Sheldon Adelson — the foolhardy Las Vegas casino magnate and crude right-wing, pro-Israel extremist,” he wrote. “Adelson personifies everything that is poisoning our democracy and Israel’s today — swaggering oligarchs, using huge sums of money to try to bend each system to their will.”

Last week, Christie apologized to Adelson, a key donor to Republican presidential candidates, for using the term “occupied territories” during a speech to Jewish Republicans.

The controversy erupted when Christie recalled a 2012 trip to Israel in remarks before the assembled crowd at the Republican Jewish Coalition event.

“I took a helicopter ride from the occupied territories across and just felt personally how extraordinary that was to understand, the military risk that Israel faces every day,” the Republican governor, who is believed to be eyeing a run to the White House in 2016, was quoted as saying by Politico.

Christie’s use of the term “occupied territories” raised eyebrows among the assembled donors.

After the event, Christie met privately with Adelson and offered an explanation and apology, which were accepted.

The New Jersey governor “clarified in the strongest terms possible that his remarks today were not meant to be a statement of policy,” a source told Politico.

Adelson, a confidante of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and the owner of the popular freebie newspaper Israel Hayom, is one of the most powerful figures in American politics by virtue of the massive donations he doles out to Republican candidates. His hawkish positions on Middle East issues, and Israel in particular, have been articulated in the past.