Last month, an anonymous U.S. official stirred a tempest in a teapot when he called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu āa chickenshitā in comments to theĀ AtlanticāsĀ Jeffrey Goldberg. The insinuation was that while Netanyahu will happily rile up his right-wing base on issues related to Palestine or Iran, he lacks the political courage to take meaningful steps to resolve either conflict.
State Department officialsĀ scurried to disavowĀ themselves of the remark. But the incident revealed an increasingly common conclusion in Washington: Netanyahuās foot-dragging on Middle East peace is not only frustrating for the United Statesāitās dangerous.
Once a taboo subject in Washington, the value of the U.S.-Israeli alliance has increasingly come under scrutiny among even leading members of the foreign policy establishment.
AsĀ Anthony Cordesmanāa Mideast expert at the center-right Center for Strategic and International Studiesāobserved, āIt is time Israel realized that it has obligations to the United States, as well as the United States to Israel, and that it become far more careful about the extent to which it test the limits of U.S. patience and exploits the support of American Jews.ā
General David Petraeus, back when he was the head of the U.S. Central Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict āfoments anti-American sentiment, due to a perception of U.S. favoritism for Israel.ā EvenĀ President ObamaĀ has listed the conflict as a factor in U.S. wars in the Middle East that are ācosting us significantly in terms of both blood and treasure.ā
These comments by leading American figures were made four years agoāwell before the Obama administration had had its biggest dustups with Netanyahuās government. TwoĀ GazaĀ warsand another round ofĀ failedĀ peace talksĀ later, nothing has changed except Israelās increasing willingness toĀ flaunt international lawāas it did in its massive assault on Gaza earlier this year, which killed some 1,500 civilians.
Now, even U.S. Secretary of State John KerryāaĀ pro-Israel stalwartāadmits, to the chagrin of Israeli officials, that the lack of progress in peace negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians is feeding support for the Islamic State. āThere wasnāt a leader I met with in the region,ā Kerry said of his efforts to cobble together an anti-Islamic State coalition, āwho didnāt raise with me spontaneously the need to try to get peace between Israel and the Palestinians, because it was a cause of recruitment and of street anger and agitation.ā
One would think that such complaints from a key ally and patron would elicit some soul-searching in the Israeli government. Yet instead of charting a new course in his speech at the United Nations last September, Netanyahu fell back on an old, lazy recipe ofĀ demonization, equating Hamas with the Islamic State and the Islamic State with Iran. And he continued oft-used delaying tactics, inviting the current coalition of Arab countries fighting the Islamic Stateto draft a new peace proposalĀ for Israel and the Palestiniansādespite his longstanding rejection of theĀ Arab Peace InitiativeĀ drafted over 10 years ago by many of those same countries. Officials in the Obama administration were reportedlyĀ āunconvincedāĀ that Netanyahuās proposal was sincere, given his lack of interest in direct talks with the Palestinians themselves.
In addition, just days before an October meeting with President Obama, Israel announced plans to construct 2,610 new housing units in East Jerusalem in violation of existing agreements. In a rare public rebuke, Obama spokesmanĀ Josh EarnestĀ said that the new settlements will alienate Israelās āclosest alliesā āpresumably including Washingtonāand ācall into question Israelās ultimate commitment to a peaceful negotiated settlement with the Palestinians.ā
Uncowed,Ā Netanyahu dismissedĀ the criticism, describing the U.S. rejection of the new settlements as āagainst American valuesā and āanti-peace.ā When an Israeli prime minister describes longstanding U.S. strategic interestsāin this case, conditions that would enable the creation of a viable Palestinian state and a just resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflictāas āun-American,ā itās a clear indication that the United States cannot continue its current course of appeasing Israelās every demand.
Thatās a conclusionĀ increasingly sharedĀ by Israelās longtime allies in Europe. Swedenās new government recently indicated that it will recognize Palestine as a state. The UK parliament followed up with aĀ symbolic recognition voteĀ of its own, and more European countries may soon do the same.
Groups in the United States and in Europe, meanwhile, have worked with Palestinian activists to organize aĀ boycottĀ of Israeli settlement products and academic institutions.Ā Indeed, U.S. civil societyāincluding many Jewish organizationsāis nowĀ leaps and boundsĀ ahead of the U.S. government when it comes to rethinking the U.S.-Israel relationship.
Nonetheless, Netanyahu now looksĀ poisedĀ to mobilize his supporters in the U.S. Congress to vote against any nuclear agreement between Washington and Tehran.
Yet even as official Washington simmers with frustration at Netanyahuās simultaneous demands for U.S. support and disregard for U.S. interests, officials rushed to put out the fire started by the anonymous āchickenshitā quip. AsĀ Foreign Policyās Steve WaltĀ put it, if Washington pretends that the āāspecial relationshipā is hunky-dory, even when it is obvious to even casual observers that it is not,ā then āNetanyahuās not chickenshitāthe White House is.ā
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