Posted by
InchDeep on Friday, August 08, 2008 3:31:41 AM
From www.iviews.com
Obama Joins the Club
The exit of Bush from the White
House is already anticipated in the Arab region with sighs of relief.
But what is ahead under the next US president; more of the same,
regardless of who wins, or change?
True, Obama has promised some
degree of withdrawal from Iraq and a level of communication with Iran.
But even these promises are ambiguous and can be easily modified to fit
political interests and lobby pressures at any time. Any military
redeployment in Iraq would, now we are told, be matched with greater
military build up in Afghanistan, a sign that the militant mentality
that motivated the war hawks in the Bush administration is yet to
change; the valuable lesson that bombs don't bring peace, yet to be
heeded.
Even talking to Iran is an
indistinct promise. To begin with, various officials in the Bush
administration have already been talking to Iran
- in less touted meetings, but they have engaged Tehran nonetheless -
in matters most pertinent to US, not Israeli, interests (i.e. the Iraq
war). Moreover, in what was widely seen as "a shift of policy", senior
US diplomat William Burns joined envoys from China, Russia, France,
Britain, Germany and the EU in their talks with Tehran in Geneva 19
July. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad praised US participation
and the "respect" the US envoy had shown during the meeting.
Obama's statements to assure
Israel on his proposed talk with Iran are most alarming. He has
tirelessly repeated that the "military option" remains on the table to
ensure Israel's security. Isn't this the exact same policy trademark
infused during the Bush administration, which eventually led to the war
on Iraq? The US will exhaust every diplomatic channel, but the
"military option" remains on the table. This was the gist of the
message repeated by the warmongers of the White House through Bush's
two terms. Does one need any proof of why such an attitude is not
reflective of well-intentioned diplomacy?
What is equally dangerous in
Obama's uttering is that he might be, and is already, feeling pressured
to balance his seemingly soft attitude towards Iraq and Iran by
exaggerating his country's pro-Israel stance in a way that will derail
any possibility for a peaceful solution to the Palestinian- Israeli
conflict, at least during his term. In fact, ominous signs of that
pressure, and his succumbing to it are ample, the last of which was his
statement, prior to his visit, that Jerusalem must remain undivided, a
position that negates international law and the consistent tradition of
various US administrations, including Bush's.
One need not repeat what Obama
has said during his visit to Israel, for such rhetoric is becoming most
predictable. His "commitment" to Israel and to the ever "special
relationship" that unites both nations were generously invoked. Obama
promised to do his utmost to keep Israel secure and to stop Iran from
obtaining the atomic bomb. As for the Palestinians, he seems keenly
interested in engaging their non-democratic forces and shuns those who
dare to challenge his country's biased official line that has
contributed in myriad ways to the ongoing conflict.
Obama insists on disregarding
the US official blind spot that has continued to
destabilize the Middle East for generations. If he is indeed interested
in straightening the distorted course of his country's foreign policy
in this region, then he is certainly viewing it from an Israeli looking
glass, the same as that used by the Bush neoconservative clique that
led America into an unrivalled downfall in Mesopotamia.
But Obama is not alone. If he
wins the presidential race he will join a growing club of Western
leaders who refuse to heed to common sense and who behave erratically,
even against the wishes of their own people.
Starting with German Chancellor
Angela Merkel's visit to Israel last March, to French President Nicolas
Sarkozy's in June, to British Prime Minister Gordon Brown's in July, no
one has failed to deviate from the predictable mantra: Israel first and
foremost. True, some like Sarkozy dared voice some criticism of
Israel's settlement policy in Jerusalem
- one that Obama cannot dare repeat, even in private - but the
underpinnings are the same: Israel, a country of a few million, remains
the primary concern of the West in a region of hundreds of millions.
Those leaders' brazen "commitment" to Israel, regardless of the
consistently brutal policy carried out by the latter, is surely bizarre
to say the least; bizarre, and in fact non-Democratic.
An international poll, conducted
by WorldPublicOpinion.org examined the views of people from 18
countries, including France, the UK and the United States. The findings
of the poll were released 1 July and were most telling. In 14 countries
"people mostly say their government should not take sides in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Just three countries
favor taking the Palestinian side (Egypt, Iran and Turkey) and one is
divided (India). No country
favors taking Israel's side, including the United States, where 71 per
cent favor
taking neither side." The entire hoopla about the "common cause" and
"special relationship" and "promised land", and the fear mongers of the
Armageddon crowd, failed to sway the views of the great majority of
Americans.
Why then, doesn't the "candidate
of change", Obama, listen to his people and truly change his
government's destructive path regarding Palestine and Israel? Why
doesn't the UK's Brown and France's Sarkozy listen to their peoples,
considering that an equal percentage in both of their countries
- 79 per cent - is beseeching them to do the same? These results have
of course been consistent with public opinion in Western countries for
years. It might
behoove these leaders to respect the cannons of democracy in their own
countries before lecturing others.
Following his Israel trip, Obama
kick-started a European tour that took him to Germany, France and the
UK. The moods were described as "cheerful" and the expectations as
"high" everywhere the senator went, including Israel. As for the
Palestinians, it's more of the same for them: the same arrogant
demands, same unfair policies, and ever-historic bias.
In the southern Israeli town of
Siderot, widely grinning Obama receive a t-shirt that read, "Siderot
loves Obama". Obama, of course, didn't visit the Gaza concentration
camp to find out what Palestinians there thought of him, considering
his ardent
defense of Israel's brutal policies against the Strip in recent years.
One can only imagine what a Gazan t-shirt for Obama might have read.