Welcome
to Greater Israel!
The
tail will be wagging the dog under Donald Trump
• DECEMBER 27, 2016
While the
presidential campaign was still in progress it was possible to think that there
might be some positive change in America’s broken foreign policy. Hillary
Clinton was clearly the candidate of Washington Establishment hawkishness,
while Donald Trump was declaring his disinclination for democracy and nation
building overseas as well as promoting détente with Russia. Those of us who
considered the foreign policy debacle to be the most dangerous issue
confronting the country, particularly as it was also fueling domestic tyranny,
tended to vote on the basis of that one issue in favor of Trump.
On
December 1st in
Cincinnati, president-elect Donald Trump made some interesting comments about his post-electoral
foreign policy plans. There were a lot of good things in it, including his
citing of $6 trillion “wasted” in Mideast fights when “our goal is stability
not chaos.” And as for dealing with real enemies, he promised to “partner with
any nation that is willing to join us in the effort to defeat ISIS and radical
Islamic terrorism…” He called it a “new foreign policy that finally learns from
the mistakes of the past” adding that “We will stop looking to topple regimes
and overthrow governments, folks.”
Regarding
the apparent inability of governments to thoroughly check out new immigrants
prior to letting them inside the country, demonstrated most recently in Nice,
Ohio and Berlin, Trump described how “People are pouring in from regions of
the Middle East — we have no idea who they are, where they come from what they
are thinking and we are going to stop that dead cold. … These are stupid
refugee programs created by stupid politicians.” Exaggerated? For sure, but he
has a point, and it all is part and parcel of a foreign policy that serves no
actual interest for people who already live in the United States.
But,
as so often with Trump, there was also the flip side. On the looney fringe of
the foreign and national security policy agenda, the president-elect oddly believes that “The United States must greatly
strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the world comes
to its senses regarding nukes.” So to reduce the number of nukes we have to
create more of them and put them in more places. Pouring gasoline on a raging
fire would be an appropriate analogy and it certainly leads to questions
regarding who is advising The Donald with this kind of nonsense.
Trump has promised
to “put America first,” but there is inevitably a spanner in the works. Now,
with the New Year only six days away and the presidential inauguration coming
less than three weeks after that, it is possible to discern that the new
foreign policy will, more than under Barack Obama and George W. Bush, be driven
in significant part by Israeli interests.
At
least Obama had the good sense to despise Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, but that will not be true of the White House after January 20th.
Trump’s very first telephone conversation with a foreign head of government
after being elected was with Netanyahu and during the campaign, he promised to
invite Bibi to the White House immediately after the inauguration. The new
president’s first naming of an Ambassador-designate to a foreign nation was of
his good friend and bankruptcy lawyer David Friedman to Israel. Friedman had headed Trump’s
Israel Advisory Committee and is a notable hard liner who supports the Israeli
settler movement, an extreme right-wing political entity that is nominally
opposed by existing U.S. government policy as both illegal and damaging to
Washington’s interests. Beyond that, Friedman rejects creation of a Palestinian
state and supports Israel’s actual annexation of the West Bank.
U.S.
Ambassadors are supposed to support American interests but Friedman would
actually be representing and endorsing a particularly noxious version of
Israeli fascism as the new normal in the relationship with Washington. Friedman describes Jerusalem as “the holy capital of the
Jewish people and only the Jewish people.” Trump is already taking steps to
move the U.S. Embassy there, making the American government unique in having
its chief diplomatic mission in the legally disputed city. The move will also
serve as a recruiting poster for groups like ISIS and will inflame opinion
against the U.S. among friendly Arab states in the region. There is no possible
gain and much to lose for the United States and for American citizens in making
the move, but it satisfies Israeli hardliners and zealots like Friedman.
The
Trump team’s animosity towards Iran is also part of the broader Israeli agenda.
Iran does not threaten the United States and is a military midget compared
either to nuclear armed Israel or the U.S. Yet is has been singled out as the
enemy du jour in the Middle East even though it has invaded
no one since the seventeenth century. Israel would like to have the United
States do the heavy lifting to destroy Iran as a regional power. If Washington
were to attempt to do so it would be a catastrophe for all parties involved but
that has not stopped hardliners from demanding unrelenting military pressure on
Tehran.
Donald
Trump is not even president yet but he advised Barack Obama to exercise the
U.S. veto for the resolution condemning Israeli settlements that was voted on
at the United Nations Security Council on Friday, explaining that “As the United States has long
maintained, peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians will only come
through direct negotiations between the parties, and not through the imposition
of terms by the United Nations. This puts Israel in a very poor negotiating
position and is extremely unfair to all Israelis.”
This is a straight
Israeli line that might even have been written by Netanyahu himself. Or by the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which fumed “AIPAC is deeply
disturbed by the failure of the Obama Administration to exercise its veto to
prevent a destructive, one-sided, anti-Israel resolution from being enacted by
the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). In the past, this administration
and past administrations have rejected this type of biased resolution since it
undermines prospects for peace. It is particularly regrettable, in his last
month in office, that the president has taken an action at odds with the
bipartisan consensus in Congress and America’s long history of standing with
Israel at the United Nations.”
Ah yes, the fabled
negotiations for a two state solution, regularly employed to enable Israelis to
do nothing while expanding their theft of Arab land and one wonders how Trump
would define what is “fair to the Palestinians?” So we are already well into
Trump’s adoption of the “always the victim argument” that the Israelis have so
cleverly exploited with U.S. politicians and the media.
Not
content with advising Obama, Trump also reportedly took the Palestinian issue
one step further by directly pressuring the sponsoring Egyptians to postpone
any submission of the resolution. Expecting to have a friendly president in the
White House after January 20th, Egypt’s president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi complied on Thursday but the motion was reintroduced
by New Zealand, Venezuela, Senegal and Malaysia on the following day. The
resolution passed with 14 yes votes and a courageous U.S. abstention after
Obama finally, after eight long years, developed a backbone. But unfortunately,
Trump’s interventions suggest that nothing critical of Israel will be allowed
to emerge from the U.N. during his term of office. Referring to the U.N. vote,
he said that “things will be different after January 20th.”
The
United Nations resolution produced an immediate reaction from Israeli Firsters
in Congress and the media, led by Senator Chuck Schumer and the Washington Post.
The Post featured
a lead editorial entitled The Obama Administration fires a dangerous parting shot and
an op-ed The United States just made Middle East peace harder by
no less a redoubtable American hero than Eliot Abrams. Look in vain for any
suggestion of what might be construed as an actual U.S. interest in either
piece. It is all about Israel, as it always is.
The
problem with Israel and its friends is that they are never satisfied and never
leave the rest of us Americans alone, pushing constantly at what is essentially
an open door. They have treated the United States like a doormat, spying on us
more than any ostensibly friendly nation while pocketing our $38 billion
donation to their expanding state without so much as a thank you. They are
shameless. Israel’s ambassador to the U.S. Ron Dermer has been all over
American television sputtering his rage over the United Nations settlements
vote. On CNN he revealed that Israel has “clear evidence” that
President Obama was “behind” the resolution and he announced his intention to
share the information with Donald Trump. Every American should be outraged by
Israel’s contempt for us and our institutions. One has to wonder if the
mainstream media will take a rest from their pillorying of Russia to cover the
story.
For many years now,
Israel has sought to make the American people complicit in its own crimes while
also encouraging our country’s feckless and corrupt leadership to provide their
government with political cover and even go to war on its behalf. This has got
to stop and, for a moment, it looked like Trump might be the man to end it when
he promised to be even-handed in negotiating between the Arabs and Israelis.
That was before he promised to be the best friend Israel would ever have.
Israel’s
quarrels don’t stay in Israel and they are not limited to the foreign policy
realm. I have already discussed the pending Anti-Semitism Awareness
Act, a bipartisan effort by Congress to penalize and even
potentially criminalize any criticism of Israel by equating it to
anti-Semitism. Whether Israel itself wants to consider itself a democracy is up
to Netanyahu and Israeli voters but the denial of basic free speech rights to
Americans in deference to Israeli perceptions should be considered to be
completely outrageous.
And there’s more.
Israel’s government funded lawfare organization Shurat HaDin has long been
using American courts to punish Palestinians and Iranians, obtaining punitive
damages linked to allegations regarding terrorist incidents that have taken
place in Israel. Now Shurat HaDin is using our courts to go after American
companies that do business with countries like Iran.
Last
year’s nuclear agreement with Iran included an end to restraints on the Islamic
Republic’s ability to engage in normal banking and commercial activity. As a
high priority, Iran has sought to replace some of its aging infrastructure, to
include its passenger aircraft fleet. Seattle based Boeing has sought to sell
to Iran Air 80 airplanes at a cost of more than $16 billion and has worked with
the U.S. government to meet all licensing and technology transfer requirements.
The civilian-use planes are not in any way configurable for military purposes,
but Shurat HaDin on December 16th sought to block the sale at a federal court in Illinois,
demanding a lien against Boeing for the monies alleged to be due to the claimed
victims of Iranian sponsored terrorism. Boeing, meanwhile, has stated that the
Iran Air order “support(s) tens of thousands of U.S. jobs.”
So
an agency of the Israeli government is taking steps to stop an American company
from doing something that is perfectly legal under U.S. law even though it will
cost thousands of jobs here at home. It is a prime example of how much Israel
truly cares about the United States and its people. And even more pathetic, the
Israel Lobby owned U.S. Congress has predictably bowed down and kissed
Netanyahu’s ring on the issue, passing a bill in November that seeks to block
Treasury Department licenses to permit the financing of the airplane deal.
The
New Year and the arrival of an administration with fresh ideas would provide a
great opportunity for the United States to finally distance itself from a toxic
Israel, but, unfortunately, it seems that everything is actually moving in the
opposite direction. Don’t be too surprised if we see a shooting war with Iran
before the year is out as well as a shiny new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem (to be
built on land stolen from Palestinians, incidentally). Trump
might think he is ushering in a new era of American policy based on American
interests but it is beginning to look a lot like same-old same-old but even
worse, and Benjamin Netanyahu will be very much in the driver’s seat.
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