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Purveyor Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-21-11 04:46 PM
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Bibi’s White House Tantrum
by Michael Tomasky

Bibi Netanyahu could have reacted any number of ways to Barack Obama’s mention of the “1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps.” Let’s say, actually, four ways—embrace, circumspection, suspicion, tantrum. That he chose the last—saying immediately after the Obama speech that he “expects” to hear Obama in essence renounce what he’d just said before the entire world!—tells us a lot about the man’s shortcomings and (lack of) political instinct. All political is local, and Netanyahu undoubtedly scored points with his Likud base back home. But he has a base here in America too, and I think he misjudged that base badly.

One senses here a big public-relations, and possibly public-opinion, shift from two years ago. Right after he took office in 2009, Obama pushed Israel too hard on settlements, thinking that he had more political capital on the issue than he had. He got slapped down, by Netanyahu and AIPAC and members of Congress from both parties. At the same time, Syria was rebuffing administration overtures, and the new president was learning the hard way that the Middle East wasn’t the staff of the Harvard Law Review, and it wouldn’t quite so pliably prostrate itself to his will and aura.

But now, is it Obama who’s going to suffer the PR blow? Something tells me that this time, the pressure will mount more on Bibi than Barack. His behavior these last 48 hours has verged on, if not been, petulant. A foreign leader (no less one of a state whose existence depends on the United States) isn’t supposed to talk like that to a president. Add to the bargain: Obama’s a stronger president now on foreign affairs than he was in 2009, partly because of the bin Laden coup and partly because the speech was generally well received across the American political spectrum. The criticisms of Obama on the borders statement have been entirely partisan, led by Republican presidential candidates. That has had the effect of cheapening the criticism of Obama and making it more dismissible: Do Americans, and Israelis and Palestinians, really care what Tim Pawlenty thinks about the situation? The Anti-Defamation League’s Abe Foxman, never shy about criticizing the administration on these matters, came out Friday to The Washington Post’s Greg Sargent and judged the speech a defense of Israel: “The speech indicated to me that this administration has come a long way in better understanding and appreciating the difficulties facing both parties, but especially Israel in trying to make peace with the Palestinians.” This may be a sign that the usual cordon won’t hold around Bibi this time. Oh, he’ll receive a thunderous welcome from Congress Tuesday, mostly from Republicans who want to embarrass Obama by backing the prime minister. But the applause will only mask temporarily what everyone knows—that he is in total denial about the future.

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http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2011-05-20/netanyahus-ill-advised-white-house-tantrum-over-obamas-mideast-speech/?om_rid=NgjnPL&om_mid=_BN18WLB8bTQEfB
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Name removed Donating Member (0 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-21-11 04:53 PM
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-21-11 04:54 PM
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2. Well, I must admit, I have struggled to digest the notion that Bibi is this stupid.
And I've been calling him stupid since I've been posting here. I even toyed with the idea that they had some sort of deal to fight in public while being more congenial behind the scenes, but I can't convince myself of that either. OTOH, if I accept the fact that Bibi did, in public, without any warning, berate Obama, the President of the USA, for that rather tepid speech he made, then yeah, I think Bibi made a really big mistake. (Which would be very Bibi-like, it's true.)
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tootrueleft Donating Member (385 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat May-21-11 09:33 PM
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3. I'm sure we'll see a video at some stage of bibi bragging about putting obama in his place
Just like the video of him bragging about sabotaging the oslo accords.
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shira Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-23-11 11:40 AM
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4. That's not a tantrum. Here's a REAL tantrum from Begin in 1981 vs. the Reagan Administration...
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