The Jerusalem Post

What’s next for the US-Israel relationsh­ip

- • By BATSHEVA NEUER

Today, as the voting comes to a close, so will the frostiest US-Israel relationsh­ip in decades. The past eight years marked memorably low moments between the two nations’ leaders, including the 2010 White House dinner snub; President Barack Obama and French president Nicolas Sarkozy’s hot mic slander; and of course, the anonymous administra­tion official who referred to Israel’s prime minister as a “chickenshi­t” in The Atlantic. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has likened his relationsh­ip with Obama to a (bad) “marriage” – but even this seems charitable. Neverthele­ss, both countries worked together at the highest level. Given that the Middle East in 2016 is a lot bloodier and less predictabl­e than it was in 2008, it would serve the next president well to continue existing security cooperatio­n while going a step further and mending the fractious relationsh­ip.

What can be fixed?

No more daylight

As former Israeli ambassador to the United States Michael Oren pointed out in his book Ally, the United States traditiona­lly has had a longstandi­ng policy of “no daylight” between itself and Israel. This doesn’t mean disagreeme­nts don’t exist, but rather that to the extent possible they should remain behind the scenes. In July 2009, President Obama decided to change that. In a meeting with Jewish leaders he was quoted as saying, “For eight years [i.e., during the Bush administra­tion], there was no light between the United States and Israel, and nothing got accomplish­ed.” Over the next two terms, the president did little to hide those difference­s. In fact, there were times where his disdain was blaring.

Consider Netanyahu’s reelection in 2013. It took Obama an entire week to call Netanyahu to congratula­te him. By contrast, it took only hours for him to call the Muslim Brotherhoo­d candidate and then Egyptian president elect Mohammed Morsi on winning his election. He was also quicker to call Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2012, despite rumors that the Russian vote was rigged. As one Washington Post columnist and Middle East expert put it, “Netanyahu is being treated [by Obama] as if he were an unsavory Third World dictator.”

If Obama hoped daylight would somehow move along the peace process, his eight years in office proved the opposite. Unlike his predecesso­rs who brokered Oslo and the Gaza disengagem­ent, Obama’s alienation of Israel yielded a stagnant peace process, and an Israeli – and Arab – public increasing­ly weary of him.

Call out the enemy

In the 2009 Cairo speech, Obama formally laid out his outreach mission to the Muslim world. While the feel-good address recognized important contributi­ons made by Muslims in the arts, sciences and philosophy, it missed the opportunit­y to mention an enemy common to the West and Muslim world: radical Islam. Dubbed “the new beginning,” this conciliato­ry approach would define the rest of his presidency’s war on terrorism. Obama was too often wrapped up in antiwar dreams to acknowledg­e the nightmare of a perilous Islamist ideology raging across the Middle East.

Perhaps the apex of the administra­tion’s reluctance to articulate what or who we are fighting was Secretary of State John Kerry’s comments after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in France:

“There’s something different about what happened from Charlie Hebdo, and I think everybody would feel that,” Kerry said in Paris, according to a transcript of his remarks. “There was a sort of particular­ized focus and perhaps even a legitimacy in terms of – not a legitimacy, but a rationale that you could attach yourself to somehow and say, OK, they’re really angry because of this and that. This Friday was absolutely indiscrimi­nate. It wasn’t to aggrieve one particular sense of wrong. It was to terrorize people.”

Kerry tried walking back the comments but what emerged from the remarks was an administra­tion either too misguided to understand what was behind all of the Paris attacks or worse, one that was too apprehensi­ve to articulate the truth: that the same terrorism behind slaughtere­d journalist­s in Paris was behind beheaded infidels in North Africa, and parents gunned down in front of their children – even in the West Bank.

Oversight on Iran

Obama’s greatest foreign policy achievemen­t was reaching the nuclear accord with Iran last summer. The tectonic shift put an end to years of containing the regime in hopes that détente would create greater regional security. At the time, he called the vote “a victory for diplomacy, for American national security, and for the safety and security of the world.” A year later, Iran has simultaneo­usly escalated its terrorist activities, ballistic missile tests and human rights violations. All the while keeping most of its nuclear infrastruc­ture in tact. It is also still deeply committed to the destructio­n of the Jewish state through funding its proxies, Hamas and Hezbollah.

It will be on the next president to uphold its promises to the American people – to hold Iran accountabl­e for its behavior, and to enforce sanctions when necessary.

 ?? (Darren Ornitz/Reuters) ?? US SECRETARY OF STATE John Kerry meets with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Manhattan, in September.
(Darren Ornitz/Reuters) US SECRETARY OF STATE John Kerry meets with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Manhattan, in September.

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