Posted on 03/09/2008 5:57:31 AM PDT by SJackson
The key question is this: Whose policy is best for Israel: Barack Obama's or the neo-con hawks'?
Instead of fearing Obama, Israel might consider that he is the President whobring peace to the Middle East.
Barack Obama has pledged that, if elected President of the United States, he will travel to a "major Islamic forum" in the first 100 days of his Administration to deliver the clear message that "we are not at war with Islam."
This is a strong signal that Obama believes George W. Bushs lethal confrontation with the world of Islam needs most urgently to be defused.
Obama has not specified where he plans to deliver his friendly message to Islam, but one can only speculate that it might be at a summit meeting of the Organization of the Islamic Conference -- an association of 65 Islamic states -- or in Saudi Arabia, home to Islams holiest shrines, or at Egypts Islamic university of Al-Azhar, or even perhaps in war-torn Iraq.
His bold pledge was made in a comprehensive policy speech in Washington last August, in which he denounced the catastrophic war in Iraq -- a war "that should never have been authorized and should never have been waged."
Instead, he affirmed -- what he has since frequently repeated -- that he would withdraw U.S. combat troops from Iraq, engage in talks with Iran and Syria, and take the fight to Americas real enemies, the Al-Qaeda terrorists hiding in their tribal sanctuaries of northwest Pakistan.
He also said that "When I am President, America will reject torture without exception close Guantanamo adhere to the Geneva Conventions and roll back the tide of hopelessness that gives rise to hate." America , he added , "must also do the hard and sustained diplomatic work in the [Middle East] region on behalf of peace and stability."
These views have caused considerable alarm among Israeli hawks, and among their even more hawkish American supporters. Would a President Obama, they ask with some anxiety, use American muscle to impose a resolution on Israel of the long-running Arab-Israeli conflict and bring to birth a viable Palestinian state -- something Israel and its friends have always sought to avoid?
The fear of the Israeli hawks -- and it is probably justified -- is that whereas Barack Obama is of course committed to the security of Israel, he is not the unconditional and uncritical supporter that President George W. Bush has been over the past seven years.
In their eyes, Obama is guilty of the unforgivable heresy of saying at different times that "the Israeli government must make difficult concessions for the peace process to restart"; that "nobody has suffered more than the Palestinian people"; and that "the creation of a wall dividing the two nations [of Israel and Palestine] is yet another example of the neglect of this Administration in brokering peace."
Earlier still -- even before the 2003 invasion of Iraq which he opposed -- Barack Obama denounced the pro-Israeli neo-conservatives, who were pressing the United States to make war on Saddam Hussein.
At an anti-war rally in Chicago on 26 October 2002, he declared: "What I am opposed to is the cynical attempt by Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz, and other arm-chair, weekend warriors in this Administration, to shove their own ideological agenda down our throats, irrespective of the costs in lives lost and in hardships borne."
Perle was then chairman of the Pentagons advisory Defence Policy Board and Wolfowitz was deputy Secretary of Defence. As everyone knows, their ideological agenda was to enhance Israels strategic environment by overthrowing and reforming Arab regimes.
They were, indeed, among the leading advocates of the view that the Arab world needed to be reshaped and remodeled by the power of the United States in order to suit Israeli strategic needs.
Their analysis of the terrorism that had struck America was self-serving. The terrorist attacks of 9/11, they argued, had nothing to do with American policies towards the Arab and Islamic world. Rather, they were the product of "violent" Arab societies.
For the United States and Israel to be safe, Arab societies had to be reformed -- if necessary by force -- beginning with Iraq. Once Saddam Husseins Iraq had been smashed and reconstituted, Syria, Iran, even Egypt and Saudi Arabia, could then be given the same treatment.
In Barack Obamas view, such dangerous ideas have led to "a misguided invasion of a Muslim country that sparks new insurgencies, ties down our military, busts our budgets, increases the pool of terrorist recruits, alienates America, gives democracy a bad name, and prompts the American people to question our engagement in the world." He wants to turn the page.
Israels hardline supporters do not like this line of argument one bit. They have even insinuated that Obama attended a madrasa when he was a child in Indonesia; that he may be a secret Muslim; that he attends a church headed by a former Black Muslim, who is anti-Israel; that one of his foreign policy advisers is none other than Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carters National Security Adviser who, like his former boss, has been openly critical of Israeli policy towards the Palestinians.
These pro-Israeli hawks do not want the United States to make peace with Islam, but rather to intensify the fight against what they like to call "Islamofascism". They do not want the United States to reach out to Iran, but rather to intimidate it and, if possible, destroy its economy.
The neo-con patriarch, Norman Podhoretz, wants the United States to bomb Iran, not to engage it in dialogue. Podhoretz happens to be the father-in-law of Eliot Abrams, the hard-line official in charge of the Middle East at the U.S. National Security Council.
The key question is this: Whose policy is best for Israel: Barack Obama's or the neo-con hawks'? At a meeting last month week with Jewish community leaders at a synagogue in Ohio, Obama chided those who believed that being pro-Israel meant adopting the hard-line policies of the Likud. "That cant be the measure of our friendship with Israel," he told them.
Israel and its friends should perhaps consider whether resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict is not better for Israel than the present violent confrontation; and whether defusing Americas hostile relations with Iran, Syria and Hizbullah might not be better for Israel than having these angry and threatening neighbours on its borders.
Instead of fearing and smearing Obama, Israel and its friends might consider that he just might be the U.S. President who can bring peace to the Middle East at last, and effect a much needed reconciliation between the West and Islam.
Is not overseeing Israels peaceful integration into the Arab world far better for its long-term security and prosperity than Bushs bankrupt policies of making war on Iraq, threatening Iran and Syria, encouraging Israels wars on Hizbullah and Hamas -- policies which have done nothing but create a thirst for revenge and hate for the United States and Israel throughout the Arab and Islamic world, and beyond?
The 46-year old Democratic Senator from Illinois, son of a black Kenyan father and a white Texan mother, is not yet in the White House. But he stands a good chance of getting there.
-- Patrick Seale is a leading British writer on the Middle East, and the author of The Struggle for Syria; also, Asad of Syria: The Struggle for the Middle East; and Abu Nidal: A Gun for Hire.
“...he will travel to a “major Islamic forum” in the first 100 days of his Administration to deliver the clear message that “we are not at war with Islam.”
Should read, “... to surrender the United States into the hands of the enemy.”
Quick, check his head for 666.
Just what the Antichrist is supposed to do in the Bible. Hmmm? I remember a promise made to Abraham, so what part of NO don’t you understand.
He’s certainly earned his Neville Chamberlain wings, if not his Vidkun Quisling wings.
Just what the Antichrist is supposed to do in the Bible. Hmmm? I remember a promise made to Abraham, so what part of NO don’t you understand.
The lyrics from an old Beatles song (Tommorow Never Knows”)popped into my head when I read this article:
Turn off your mind, relax and float down stream,
It is not dying, it is not dying
Lay down al thoughts, surrender to the void,
Yup, Al Jazeera, the bastion of logic. Didn’t one of their clerics claim that the sun was just twice the size of the moon? Gads, no wonder the only reason these clowns have any life at all is because of oil.
High Volume. Articles on Israel can also be found by clicking on the Topic or Keyword Israel. or WOT [War on Terror]
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Should Sen Obama gain the WH, his appeasement mentality and apologist philosophy will be seen as a victory by the islamists. His undoing of the progress made in Iraq and Afghanistan will be cheered in the madrassas and the mosques around the world.
This inexperienced, blind-to-reality DhimmiRat has no clue about the true nature of islam and the muslim goal of the global caliphate.
I shudder to think about the damage this man could do as POTUS.
Our enemies are already rejoicing at the prospect of a Treason Party President, particularly one who is not, and never has been, a Muslim. (wink, wink)
Why are you not opposing this article instead of promoting it?
Leave us out of his gene pool.
Yes, that's in the Koran, leading to
Iraqi TV Debate: Is the Earth Flat?
At a distance you see blurred objects as round, when you get close you realize they're straight. Same thing with the earth. Round far away, but flat when you're standing on it. Thus the reality is flat.
“The 46-year old Democratic Senator from Illinois, son of a black Kenyan father and a white Texan mother, is not yet in the White House. But he stands a good chance of getting there.”
His mother is a Kansan, NOT A TEXAN!
Another glowing endorsement for Hussien Obama from a ‘respected’ group, Al Jazeera.
Aljazeera says Obama is going to be good for Israel. LOL.
Respected and well informed, as is the candidate.
At a meeting last month week with Jewish community leaders at a synagogue in Ohio, Obama chided those who believed that being pro-Israel meant adopting the hard-line policies of the Likud. "That cant be the measure of our friendship with Israel," he told them.
You'd think Likud was part of the government?
Neocon this, Likud that, that's the message.
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