From: FresnoZionism
May 4th, 2012
I want to discuss three positions taken by the Obama
Administration which are opposed to American interests and make war,
not peace, more likely. There are many other issues that I could
discuss, both about the Mideast and elsewhere, but these are emblematic
of the general problem.
Position 1. Sanctions and negotiations can cause Iran to give up the pursuit of nuclear weapons.
The possession of nuclear weapons will give Iran the power to
dominate the Muslim Middle East, economically and politically. This is
the primary goal of the revolutionary regime. The Iranian leadership is
not averse to any hardship that may be felt by the general populace,
because 1) as a totalitarian regime they are not politically accountable
to their people, and 2) any form of economic sanctions will always be
‘leaky’ enough to permit favored elements to receive the resources they
need, especially since Russia and China will not be cooperative with the
West.
The result of negotiations will, at best, be that the Iranian
strategy will change from a straight-line effort to get deliverable
weapons to a “just in time” strategy in which all the pieces except the final assembly of a weapon are put in place.
The only thing short of military intervention that could make them
stop would be a credible threat thereof, combined with a thorough and
effective inspection program. This isn’t going to happen in time.
Meanwhile, the enrichment of uranium and other development continues.
Position 2. The threat against the West from radical Islam comes primarily from al-Qaeda, and not radical Islam in general.
The Muslim Brotherhood is not any less radical, from an ideological
point of view, than al-Qaeda. Where it differs is that it thinks, quite
rationally, that for it, today, violent jihad against the West
is likely to be counterproductive. Once it cements its control over the
most populous country in the Middle East, it may think differently.
The Obama Administration supports — or at least does not not oppose —
the Brotherhood in Egypt, it allowed Hizballah to take almost total
control of Lebanon, it restricts Israel from acting against Hamas in
Gaza, and it applauds the Islamist Erdoğan regime in Turkey — with which
it collaborates in working to replace the imploding Assad government in
Syria with an Islamist regime (and I might add that before Assad’s
difficulties, it called for ‘engagement’ with him).
On the home front, the administration does not consider radical Islam
a threat, unless it is related to al-Qaeda. So it is supposed to be
reassuring when someone is arrested for trying to explode a car bomb in
Times Square and we are told that “he wasn’t a member of a recognized
terrorist organization.”
The obsession with al-Qaeda, which, as Barry Rubin points out,
doesn’t control countries with populations in the millions like Iran,
Lebanon and Egypt, is worse than irrational — it causes us to ignore
trends whose results will be disastrous in the near future.
Position 3. The Israeli-Arab conflict can be ended by withdrawal from the territories.
Although there is abundant evidence that the PLO is not prepared to
end the conflict with Israel regardless of the amount of land it is
given, and that anyway an Israeli withdrawal from Judea and Samaria
would likely lead to a Hamas takeover and missile attacks on the center
of the country, the Obama Administration continues to insist that a
“two-state solution” would bring peace.
The “land for peace” formula has been a failure, both in Gaza and
increasingly with Egypt, thanks to the Islamist ideology that
characterizes Hamas and is sweeping Egypt. While the PLO has a secular
ideology, they are no less dedicated to reversing the nakba and recovering their ‘honor’ by eliminating the Jewish state.
Forcing Israel to make concessions encourages the Arabs to make more
demands and to express their ‘frustration’ when no concession is enough
by intifadas and terrorism, to which Israel is forced to respond. This
is a path to war, not peace.
So why does the administration cleave to such irrational positions?
Unsurprisingly, the answer to this is also ideology. Barack Obama and
many of his appointees share a New Left sensibility, which includes the
ideas that colonialism and imperialism — particularly ‘US imperialism’
is the root of all evil, that it is meaningless to suggest that one
culture could be morally superior to another, and that national
interests should be subordinated to multilateral cooperation. Many of
them accept “postcolonial”
theory, in which the ‘colonized’ party — Iran, Muslims, the
Palestinians — is considered morally superior to the ‘colonizers’ and is
permitted to express itself violently if necessary to ‘resist’
colonization.
The challenge from Iran is a challenge to Western control of the
region: for lack of a better phrase, to Western imperialism. While in
principle this it is less than ideal, the world in practice would be a
far worse place if the Middle East were dominated by radical Iranian imperialists. The administration is incapable of seeing this and loathe to employ traditional gunboat diplomacy to fix it.
The same ideology blinds it to the nature of radical Islam (all
cultures are assumed to be of equal value, Muslim countries are
‘colonized’), as well as the Israeli-Arab conflict. In that case, we
know that the Left sees it as the epitome of a struggle of national
liberation from colonial bondage — which of course is almost exactly the
opposite of the truth, which is that it is a reactionary attempt to
crush the expression of Jewish self-determination.
Would a Romney Administration be different?
I strongly doubt that Mr. Romney and his associates
share the New Left, post-colonialist ideology of the Obama
Administration. So at least his policy would not be skewed by this
particular perspective.
There is also another factor at work in connection with the
Israeli-Arab conflict. It seems to be the case that Mr. Obama has a
visceral dislike for Israeli PM Netanyahu. It was on display when he
abandoned the Prime Minister to go to dinner in March 2010, when he
publicly demanded Israeli withdrawal to 1949 lines while Netanyahu was
en route to the US in May of 2011, and when he made his famous ‘open
microphone’ remark to French President Sarkozy last November. Whether it
is ideological in basis or just personal, there is no doubt that it is
real. Romney, on the other hand, has known Netanyahu for some time and
is said to have a good relationship with him.
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