http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BahjX9nI5k
Netanyahu and Obama are at point of no return
By Akiva Eldar
The strife between Israel and the United States concerns something far
bigger than the proximity talks with the Palestinians. As far as President
Barack Obama and his senior advisers are concerned, Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is to blame for nothing less than damaging the standing of the
U.S.in the Middle East and the Muslim world.
Just as Netanyahu received his standing ovation at the AIPAC conference,
Obama and his advisers were ruminating over an altogether different
convention - the Arab League begins a meeting Tripoli on Saturday. For the
Americans, Netanyahu's Likudnik speech and the Shpeherd Hotel project
matched in embarrassment the scandalous announcement of construction in East
Jerusalem during Vice President Joe Biden's visit here.
This year's Arab League summit will be the scene of struggle between the
allies of Iran and the allies of American, and the violation of the status
quo in Al Quds - Jerusalem - has direct implications for the balance of
power between the sides. Over the last few weeks, Americans have been giving
life support to the Arab Peace Initiative, born at the League's summit in
Beirut 2002 and set to be on the agenda this week.
The absence of Egyptian President Mubarak, who is recovering from an
operation in Berlin, doesn't make it any easier for the U.S. to resist the
efforts of Syria and Libya to suspend or possibly even terminate the peace
initiative. The al-Mabhouh assassination, insulting as it was to the rulers
of the Gulf, doesn't do much for the other proponents of the initiative,
King Abdullah of Saudia and King Abdullah II of Jordan. The Saudi king had
asked the Quartet for clarifications about Israel's latest moves in
Jerusalem and specifically about Netanyahu's statement of intent for the
Arab part of the city.
The messages coming to the White House from Riyadh and Amman, then, were
starkly clear: If you don't rein in your Israeli friends, Tehran won't be
the only Middle East capital where American flags will burn.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates has decisively supported General David
Petraeus, the first American military man in years to describe Israel as a
strategic burden on the U.S. Gates said America's rivals in the Middle East
are abusing the standstill of the political process between Israel and the
Arabs. He stressed that he had no doubt a lack of peace in the region was
influencing American interests there.
Netanyahu had been hoping to buy time until November's Congressional
elections, which coincide with the deadline he set for the settlement
freeze. But with America's strategic interest on the line, Bibi's favorite
political game (playing the Jewish community and Congress against the White
House and the State Department) isn't working anymore. Obama decided his
moderate Middle East coalition is more important than Netanyahu's extremist
one. This is a point of no return.
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1159300.html
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