A 2-State Peace Plan Based on 2 Lunatic Assumptions:
(1) Palestinians Can establish centralized, viable State,
(2) Arabs can abandon their dreams to Eliminate Israel,
2 impossibilities Between Ishmael & Jacob Descendants!
Lion’s Den: Obama AND Netanyahu Meet – Wh
at’s Next?
Is Question Raised by Daniel Pipes in the Jerusalem Post!
ITS Lunatic Madness To Think Islam Lunar god CAN DO (1)
AND (2) – World Had Better Get Set For False Peace & War
For War Is Likely To Begin At A Point In Time 2010 TO 2015!
May 19, 2009
http://www.tribulationperiod.com/
Begin Excerpt from Israel News Net
Only 1 in 3 Israelis thinks Obama is pro-Israel
Israel News.Net
Monday 18th May, 2009 (ANI)
Jerusalem, May 18 : Only 31 percent of Israelis consider US President Barack Obama’s approach pro-Israel, a survey conducted ahead of the meeting between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu revealed.
According to a Smith Research poll, 31 percent Israelis labeled Obama pro-Israel, while 14 percent said he was pro-Palestinian and 40 percent felt he was neutral.
The remaining 15 percent didn’t have any views on the issue.
The poll, conducted on 500 Israelis last week, has an error margin of 4.5 percent, The Jerusalem post reports.
Obama’s numbers contrast sharply with those of his predecessor, George W.
Bush, whose administration was considered pro-Israel by 88 percent of the respondents.
Obama’s ratings may have gone down after condemnations of Israeli policies by US Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and others.
Obama is expected to unveil his policies on the Arab-Israeli conflict in Cairo on June 4.
Currently, he is in a “policy review period” that he will conclude only after Netanyahu, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak visit the US by the end of the month.
Israelis, according to the poll, view governments of o
ther European countries even less favourable than the US.
Among those nations, only the government of German Chancellor Angela Merkel was seen as being more pro-Israel (37 percent) than pro-Palestinian (21 percent).
The pro-Palestinian tilt was even more pronounced for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government (a 14 percentage point spread).
I certainly agree with the three paragraph quote from the JP Excerpt which follows:
BEGIN QUOTE
“[By now, the political parties diverge greatly; polls find Republican support for Israel exceeds Democratic support by an average margin of 26 percentage points.
Likewise, Republicans endorse the United States helping Israel attack Iran far more than Democrats. With Democrats now dominating Washington, this disparity implies a cooling from the George W.
Bush years.
Gary Ackerman (Democrat of New York), chair of the House Foreign Affairs Middle East subcommittee, exemplifies this change.
Known in years past to stand up for Israel, he now accuses it of perpetuating “settler pogroms” and thus taking part in a “destructive dynamic.” Question: Will the Democrats’ critical views translate into a policy shift at the forthcoming summit meeting
?
(3) Obama himself comes out of the Democratic party¹s intensely anti-Zionist left wing.
Just a few years back, he associated with voluble Israel-haters like Ali Abunimah, Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said, and Jeremiah Wright, not to speak of Saddam Hussein lackeys, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and the Nation of Islam. As Obama rose in national politics, he distanced himself from this crew. On winning the presidency, he appointed mostly mainstream Democrats to deal with the Middle East.
One can only speculate whether his change was tactical, designed to deny the Republicans a campaign issue, or strategic, representing a genuinely new approach.]”
END QUOTE
Begin Excerpt from Jerusalem Post
Lion’s Den: Obama and Netanyahu Meet – What’s Next?
May. 17, 2009
Daniel Pipes , THE JERUSALEM POST
The meeting on May 18 of two newly elected leaders, Barack Obama and Binyamin Netanyahu, raise a basic question about US-Israel relations: Will this long-standing alliance survive its 62nd year?
Here are three reasons to expect a break from business-as-usual:
(1) Many areas of difference exist ¬ the Iranian nuclear build-up, relations with Syria, Israeli adherence to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and Jews living on the West Bank ¬ but the “two-state solution” will likely set the meetings’ tone, mood, and outcome. The two-state idea aims to end the Arab-Israeli conflict by establishing a Palestinian state alongside the Jewish state. The plan rests on two assumptions: (a) that the Palestinians can construct a centralized, viable state and (b) that attaining this state means the abandonment of their dreams to eliminate Israel.
The two-state model found acceptance among the Israeli public between the Oslo accords of 1993 and the new round of Palestinian violence in 2000. On the surface, to be sure, “two state” seems yet strong among Israelis: Ehud Olmert enthused over the Annapolis round, Avigdor Lieberman accepts the ³Performance-Based Roadmap to a Permanent Two-State Solution,² and a recent Tel Aviv University poll finds ³two states² still remains popular.
But many Israelis, including Netanyahu, disbelieve that Palestinians will either construct a state or abandon irredentism. Netanyahu prefers to shelve ³two states² and focus instead on institution-building, economic development, and quality-of-life improvements for Palestinians. To this, the Arab states, Palestinians, European governments, and the Obama administration near-unanimously respond with vociferous hostility.
Question: Will differences over the two-state solution prompt a crisis in US-Israel relations?
(2) Larger strategic concerns consistently drive US attitudes to Israel: Republicans kept their distance when they perceived Israel as a liability in confronting the Soviet Union (1948-70) and only warmed to it when Israel proved its strategic utility (after 1970); Democrats cooled in the post-Cold War period (after 1991), when many came to see it as an “apartheid” state that destabilizes the Middle East and impedes US policies there.
By now, the political parties diverge greatly; polls find Republican support for Israel exceeds Democratic support by an average margin of 26 percentage points. Likewise, Republicans endorse the United States helping Israel attack Iran far more than Democrats. With Democrats now dominating Washington, this disparity implies a cooling from the George W. Bush years.
Gary Ackerman (Democrat of New York), chair of the House Foreign Affairs Middle East subcommittee, exemplifies this change.
Known in years past to stand up for Israel, he now accuses it of perpetuating “settler pogroms” and thus taking part in a “destructive dynamic.” Question: Will the Democrats’ critical views translate into a policy shift at the forthcoming summit meeting?
(3) Obama himself comes out of the Democratic party¹s intensely anti-Zionist left wing. Just a few years back, he associated with voluble Israel-haters like Ali Abunimah, Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said, and Jeremiah Wright, not to speak of Saddam Hussein lackeys, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and the Nation of Islam. As Obama rose in national politics, he distanced himself from this crew. On winning the presidency, he appointed mostly mainstream Democrats to deal with the Middle East. One can only speculate whether his change was tactical, designed to deny the Republicans a campaign issue, or strategic, representing a genuinely new approach.
QUESTION: HOW DEEP runs Obama’s antipathy toward the Jewish state
? Some predictions: (1) Iran being Netanyahu’s top priority, he will avoid a crisis by mouthing the words “two-state solution” and agreeing to diplomacy with the Palestinian Authority.
(2) Democrats too will be on their best behavior, checking their alienation through Netanyahu¹s visit, momentarily averting a meltdown. (3) Obama, who has plenty of problems on his hands, does not need a fight with Israel and its supporters.
His move to the center, however tactical, will last through the Netanyahu visit.
Short term prospects, then, hold out more continuity than change in US-Israel relations. Those concerned with Israel’s security will prematurely breathe a sigh of relief -¬ premature because the status quo is fragile and US relations with Israel could rapidly unravel.
Even a lack of progress toward a Palestinian state can prompt a crisis, while an Israeli strike against Iran¹s nuclear infrastructure contrary to Obama¹s wishes might cause him to terminate the bond begun by Harry Truman, enhanced by John Kennedy, and solidified by Bill Clinton.
The writer is director of the Middle East Forum and Taube distinguished visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University.
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