Albuquerque Journal

Despite Obama, Israel now on stronger ground

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University

Israel would seem to be in a disastrous position, given the inevitable nuclear capabiliti­es of Iran and the recent deteriorat­ion of its relationsh­ip with the United States, its former patron and continued financial benefactor.

Immediatel­y upon entering office, President Obama hectored Israel on so-called settlement­s. Obama promised to put “daylight” between the U.S. and Israel — and delivered on that promise.

Last week, the U.S. declined to veto, and therefore allowed to pass, a United Nations resolution that, among other things, isolates Israel internatio­nally and condemns the constructi­on of housing in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Obama has long been at odds with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Over objections from the Obama administra­tion, Netanyahu addressed a joint session of Congress last year about the existentia­l dangers of the Obama-brokered Iran deal and the likelihood of a new Middle East nuclear proliferat­ion race.

Obama then doubled down on his irritation with Netanyahu through petty slights, such as making him wait during White House visits.

At a G-20 summit in Cannes, France, in 2011, Obama, in a hot-mic slip, trashed Netanyahu. He whined to French President Nicolas Sarkozy: “You’re tired of him? What about me? I have to deal with him every day.”

In contrast, Obama bragged about his “special” relationsh­ip with autocratic Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Never mind that Erdogan seems to want to reconstruc­t Turkey as a modern Islamist version of the Ottoman Empire, or that he is anti-democratic while Israel is a consensual society of laws.

The Middle East surroundin­g democratic Israel is a nightmare. Half a million have died amid the moonscape ruins of Syria. A once-stable Iraq was overrun by the Islamic State.

The Arab Spring, U.S. support for the Muslim Brotherhoo­d in Egypt, the coup of General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to regain control of Egypt, and the bombing of Libya all have left North Africa in turmoil.

Iran has been empowered by the U.S.-brokered deal and will still become nuclear.

Russian bombers blast civilians not far from Israel’s borders.

Democrats are considerin­g Rep. Keith Ellison as the next chairman of the Democratic National Committee despite his past ties to the Nation of Islam and his history of anti-Israel remarks.

Yet, somehow Israel is in its best geostrateg­ic position in decades. How?

The answer is a combinatio­n of unintended consequenc­es, deft diplomacy, political upheavals in Europe and the United States, and Israel’s own democratic traditions.

Huge natural gas and oil finds off Israel’s Mediterran­ean coast and in the Golan Heights have radically changed Israel’s energy and financial positions. Israel no longer needs to import costly fossil fuels and may soon be an exporter of gas and oil to needy customers in Europe and the Middle East.

The Obama administra­tion’s estrangeme­nt from Israel has had the odd effect of empowering Israel.

Rich Persian Gulf states see Obama as hostile both to Israel and to themselves, while he appeases the common enemy of majority-Shiite Iran.

After a “leading from behind” U.S withdrawal from the Middle East, many Arab nations now see Israel more as a powerful ally against Iran than as an old existentia­l enemy. They also see Israel as a country that has likewise been snubbed by America.

The idea of an Arab-Israeli understand­ing is surreal, but it is developing from shared fears of being targets of Iranian bombing and American indifferen­ce.

Many of Israel’s neighbors are threatened by either ISIS or al-Qaida nihilists. Those deadly dangers remind the world that democratic, freemarket Israel is the sole safe port amid a rising Middle East tsunami.

Changing Western politics are empowering Israel as well.

More than 2 million migrants — for the most part, young males from the war-torn Middle East — have terrified Europe, especially after a series of radical Islamic terrorist killings. Suddenly, Europe is far more worried about Israel’s neighbors than about lecturing Israel itself.

Pushback against the Obama administra­tion extends to its foreign policy. President-elect Donald Trump may be more pro-Israel than any recent U.S. president.

For all the chaos and dangers abroad, the map of global energy, Western politics and Middle Eastern alliances has been radically redrawn.

At the center is a far stronger Israel that has more opportunit­ies than at any other time in its history. It will have an even brighter future after Obama has left office.

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