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 Netanyahu Versus Obama: What Next?  By Alan Hart Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 19, 2012 Breaking free of Israel
 Alan Hart assesses Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin 
	Netanyahu’s options as he tries to sabotage the prospect of a second term 
	for Barack Obama by dragging the US into a war with Iran, and argues that 
	the real danger is that Netanyahu’s anti-Iran rhetoric – “a combination of 
	wretchedness and megalomania” – may create an unstoppable momentum for war.
 
 The headline over an article by Bradley Burston in Haaretz on 
	Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s poker game with President Barack 
	Obama was “If Obama wins in November, is Netanyahu in trouble?” That’s a 
	question I’ve had in my own mind for quite some time and it begs another. 
	What, really, worries Netanyahu most: the prospect (not real) of Iran posing 
	an existential threat to Israel or the prospect (real) of a second-term 
	Obama?
 
 There is, Burston wrote, something new in the air, something 
	Netanyahu does not like. What is it? “American conservatives have begun to 
	think out loud that Barack Obama will win in November.”
 
 In my opinion 
	there’s a better-than-evens chance that in the course of a second Obama 
	term, America would put its own best interests first, which would mean an 
	end to unconditional American support for the Zionist state of Israel right 
	or wrong. (As is often the case, the gentile me and Gideon Levy are on the 
	same page. The headline over one of his recent articles in Haaretz 
	was “It’s only a matter of time before US tires of Israel.”)
 
 There 
	are three main reasons why I have that opinion.
 The first is my belief that Obama 
	hates being a prisoner of the Zionist lobby and its stooges in Congress. (I 
	think that Max Hastings, a former editor of the Daily Telegraph and 
	a well respected military historian, was spot on when he wrote the following 
	in a recent article for the Daily Mail. “Privately, Obama yearns to 
	come down hard n Netanyahu, whom he dislikes intensely. But the US President 
	does not dare to do this when his own re-election may hinge on the 3 per 
	cent of American voters who are Jewish.”)Netanyahu’s options
 The second, and much more 
	to the real point, is that behind closed doors there are now many in the top 
	levels of America’s military, intelligence and foreign policy establishments 
	who are aware that an Israel which has no interest in peace with the 
	Palestinians, and is led by men who want war with Iran, is an Israel that is 
	much more of a liability than an asset for the US. There is also awareness 
	in the top levels of America’s military, intelligence and foreign policy 
	establishments that Netanyahu decided to play the Iran threat card in order 
	to divert attention away from Israel’s ongoing consolidation of its 
	occupation of the West Bank and, in short, to have Palestine taken off the 
	American foreign policy agenda.
 
 The third is the insight given to me 
	by former President Jimmy Carter when my wife and I met him and Rosalyn 
	after they had said goodbye to the White House. “Any American president has 
	only two windows of opportunity to break or try to break the Zionist lobby’s 
	stranglehold on Congress on matters to do with Israel Palestine.”
 
 The 
	first window is during the first nine months of a president’s first term 
	because after that the soliciting of funds for the mid-term elections 
	begins. Presidents don’t have to worry on their own account about funds for 
	mid-term elections, but with their approach no president can do or say 
	anything that would offend the Zionist lobby and cost his party seats in 
	Congress. The second window of opportunity is the last year of his second 
	term if he has one. In that year, because he can’t run for a third term, no 
	president has a personal need for election campaign funds or organized 
	votes. (I imagine that incoming President Obama, briefed by Carter or not, 
	was fully aware of these limited windows of opportunity and that was why he 
	tried in his first nine months to get a freeze on Israel’s illegal 
	settlement activity.)
 
 So my answer to Burston’s headline question is 
	yes, Netanyahu could very well be in trouble if Obama wins a second term.
 
 A good indication of Netanyahu’s fear of a second term Obama is, I 
	think, the mountain of money his seriously wealthy supporters in America are 
	investing in the effort to get a Republican into the White House who will 
	allow Netanyahu and the Zionist lobby to pull his strings.
 
 Question: 
	Given that he does not want Obama to have a second term, what now are 
	Netanyahu’s options?
 I can see three possibles.”The most dangerous man in the world”
 One 
	is to watch and wait and hope that there will be a downturn in the American 
	economy between now and November that will assist a Republican presidential 
	candidate to defeat Obama.
 
 Another is to launch a unilateral attack 
	on Iran’s nuclear sites (never mind that Iran’s leaders have not taken a 
	decision to go nuclear for weapons and possibly never will unless Iran is 
	attacked).
 
 Question: How might initiating a war with Iran assist 
	Netanyahu to put Obama in real trouble?
 
 One short answer is that the 
	probable regional and global fall-out of an Israeli attack on Iran, 
	including soaring oil prices, could bring what is being presented as a slow 
	but sure recovery of the American economy to a swift halt. And that, most 
	likely, would be enough to guarantee Obama’s defeat in November. (In an
	
	analysis for The National Interest, an American bimonthly 
	foreign policy journal, Paul Pillar, a former, very senior CIA analyst and 
	today a visiting professor at Georgetown University for security studies, 
	noted that the welfare of American consumers and workers is “not high” on 
	the list of decision-making criteria for Netanyahu and his government.)
 
 There is, however, one thing that could cause Netanyahu not to go with 
	this option. Quite apart from the fact that Israel’s past and present 
	intelligence and military chiefs are divided on the wisdom of a unilateral 
	Israeli attack on Iran, the polls are showing that a majority of Israeli 
	Jews are opposed to Israel going it alone with an attack on Iran. They’re in 
	favour of Iran being attacked but only if America becomes engaged and takes 
	the lead.
 
 And that brings us to a possible third option for 
	Netanyahu. It is to commission a Mossad false flag operation – an attack on 
	a vital American interest or interests for which Iran could be and would be 
	framed.
 
 The Zionist lobby, Obama’s Republican rivals and much if not 
	all of the American mainstream media would promote this falsehood as fact, 
	and that could leave Obama with no choice but to commit American military 
	power. If he did not, his Republican challenger or challengers, assisted by 
	the Zionist lobby and most if not all of the American mainstream media, 
	would accuse him of failing to protect America’s security interests and 
	betraying Israel. And that, given the ignorance of American public opinion, 
	would almost certainly be enough to guarantee Obama’s defeat.
 
 For his 
	own part Obama absolutely does not want war another war. He’s frightened, as 
	he should be, of the possible/probable consequences.
 
 Quite apart from 
	the possible/probable economic consequences (including soaring petrol prices 
	in America), Obama understands completely that US engagement in a new and 
	broader regional war will ignite more anti-Americanism and play into the 
	hands of Arab and other Muslim radicals and extremists, perhaps to the point 
	of assisting them to become the dominant political power in the region. And 
	that, were it to happen, would be potentially catastrophic for America’s 
	best interests in the Arab and wider Muslim world. (Netanyahu would, of 
	course, be quietly pleased because his Israel needs enemies.)
 So far as I am 
	aware there is no well informed commentator who is prepared to make an 
	explicit prediction about what Netanyahu will do – whether he will or will 
	not order a unilateral Israeli attack on Iran in the closing stages of the 
	American election. If I had to bet my life on it, I’d say he won’t; but 
	there’s a real danger that his anti-Iran rhetoric, described in a recent 
	Haaretz editorial as “a combination of wretchedness and megalomania”, 
	may create an unstoppable momentum for war.
 As my readers know, I 
	regard Haaretz as the most honest newspaper in the world on the 
	subject of what is really happening in Israel. Its view of Netanyahu was on 
	display in a recent editorial headlined “Israel must not lend itself to 
	Netanyahu’s vulgar rhetoric on Iran.” I think the whole editorial ought to 
	be required reading not only for those who want to replace Obama as 
	president but for all American voters. Here is the text of it:
 
		Anyone who cares about 
		Israel's future could not help but feel a chill upon hearing Benjamin 
		Netanyahu's recent speech at the AIPAC [American Israel Public Affairs 
		Committee] conference – if not because of the gravity of the existential 
		threat it described, then because of its sheer vulgarity and bad taste. 
		The prime minister, as if he were no more than a surfer leaving feedback 
		on a website, did not hesitate to crassly compare Israel today to the 
		situation of European Jewry during the Holocaust. And to spice up his 
		speech with one of those visual gimmicks he so loves, he even pulled out 
		a photostat of correspondence in order to imply a comparison between US 
		President Barack Obama's cautious approach toward attacking Iran and 
		President Franklin D. Roosevelt's refusal to bomb the rail lines to 
		Auschwitz.
 Netanyahu sometimes seems like he is holding a 
		debating competition with himself. Every speech is the “speech of his 
		life” and must overshadow its predecessor, while afterward, as if they 
		were rehashing a sporting event, he and his aides gleefully count the 
		number of standing ovations, especially from his American listeners. And 
		in order to wring an ovation from the end of every sentence, it seems as 
		if all means are legitimate: kitsch (trash) and death, threats 
		and vows, warnings and rebukes of the entire world.
 
 This time, 
		too, it's not quite clear what he wanted to obtain via this inane 
		rhetoric – a combination of wretchedness and megalomania – aside from 
		applause. Did he want pity? To prick the conscience of the world? To 
		terrify himself, or perhaps to inflame the Churchillian fantasy in which 
		he lives? But one thing is clear: Aside from the fact that he deepened 
		our feelings of victimhood, insulted the American president and narrowed 
		the options for diplomacy, Netanyahu did not improve Israel's situation 
		one jot by this speech, just as he hasn't by any of his others.
 
 Netanyahu isn't the first Israeli prime minister, especially from the 
		right, to harp on the trauma of the Holocaust. But in contrast to 
		Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon, who at the moment of truth also 
		displayed diplomatic and leadership abilities, Netanyahu was and remains 
		essentially a PR man: someone for whom words and rhetoric replace 
		reality. The spine-chilling fear is that one day, all of us – himself 
		included, despite his caution and hesitation – will discover too late 
		that we have become hostages to his Churchillian speech, but without a 
		Churchillian victory.
 I’ll conclude with my own favourite story about Netanyahu.
 Way 
	back in 1984 I had an appointment for lunch in New York with the Englishman 
	I most admire, Brian (later knighted) Urquhart. He was an 
	undersecretary-general of the UN with the responsibility for conflict 
	management. He served four secretary-generals and was, in fact, the world’s 
	number one trouble-shooter. Because of his matchless grasp of international 
	affairs and his integrity, he was respected by leaders on both sides of all 
	the conflicts he managed. And he never pulled his punches in behind-closed 
	doors exchanges with leaders. On one private occasion Prime Minister Begin 
	said he should not talk with Arafat. Urquhart looked Begin in the eye and 
	said: “Mr Prime Minister, I am the servant of the international community, 
	don’t you dare to tell me who I can and cannot talk to!”
 
 When Brian 
	arrived for lunch, he said as he was sitting down, “I’ve just met the most 
	dangerous man in the world.”
 
 I asked who it was.
 
 Brian 
	replied: “He’s just presented his credentials as Israel’s ambassador to the 
	UN, Binyamin Netanyahu.”
     
 
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