Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Love on the rocks

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist Georgie Anne Geyer has been a foreign correspond­ent and commentato­r on internatio­nal affairs for more than 40 years.

What is the real story behind the old fishwives’ yowling passing back and forth between Washington and Jerusalem these days? My dignified Maine Coon cat, Yankee, would be embarrasse­d were such 3-inthe-morning cries attributed to him.

One has to conclude that this is not just another of those old squabbles between the Americans and the Israelis. No, this is something different. This is the equivalent of a fractious married couple looking deep into each other’s eyes and saying, “No, this is enough.”

The Israelis — and by that I mean only the government of hard-line Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu and his even more-rightist followers — are arguing that “enough” is the Security Council resolution put forward in the United Nations as this prepostero­us year waned, once again condemning Israeli settlement­s that are spreading like wildfire over the supposedly Palestinia­n land of the West Bank, burning away every last hope for a Palestinia­n state.

Hardly new, but there are parts of the resolution, such as including the Israelis’ sacred Western Wall under Palestinia­n territory, that are genuinely untenable.

But the really new part was that Washington did not kowtow, as it has for 36 years, to whatever Jerusalem wanted (at that moment), and abstained from voting on the resolution. Abstained? How dare Barack Obama do this to his “closest ally” and the “only democracy in the Middle East”?

As for Washington, the Obama administra­tion sees “enough” as one too many insults and calumnies from Jerusalem and WAY too many promises that never even remotely came true. Over these last eight years, Bibi had repeatedly promised Barack that, yes, he would control Israeli settlement, which is a snarky way to move Israelis (many of them, ironically, Americans) onto land the entire world agreed to be Palestinia­n territory.

Instead, when the Oslo Accords were signed in 1993, there were roughly 110,000 settlers in West Bank and 146,000 in East Jerusalem territory; today there are an estimated 600,000! In addition, the Israeli prime minister has been pushing fiercely controvers­ial legislatio­n in the Knesset, the Regulation Bill, which would retroactiv­ely legalize settler outposts and homes built on privately owned Palestinia­n land — and force the owners to accept compensati­on.

All this after the Obama administra­tion, in the most generous act of American goodwill in the history of Israel, had agreed to provide the Jewish state with $38 billion in military aid over the next 10 years. Oh, there were complaints from Israeli negotiator­s; they had wanted $45 billion.

But instead of going along quietly this time around, the U.S. added language to the aid provision saying that, if Jerusalem were to go around the White House — to the Congress, for instance, to get more money — that money will have to be returned to the U.S.

Today, in fact, history shows quite clearly that many of the major impulses behind the 2003 war in Iraq came from fervent American supporters of Israel, popularly and derogatori­ly referred to as the “neocons,” perfervid ideologues like Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Irving Kristol, among them. Thus, far from the U.S. involving itself in Israeli affairs, it is more true that Israel is deforming America’s affairs.

Prime Minister Netanyahu, in his many derisive comments about the United States, now says that Israel has many other friends — all over the world, he boasts! But the U.N. Security Council vote stands as a rather convincing refutation of such swagger, since the vote was 14to-0 against Israel.

It is becoming clearer every day, including to many in Israel, that the old agreements, if indeed they were actually agreements, are not working. Perhaps it is time for some new “truths” between these two so dissimilar countries.

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