Secretary of State Antony Blinken listens as President Joe Biden delivers remarks to State Department staff on February 4, 2021, in Washington [AP/Evan Vucci]
Michael Doran and Tony Badran, The Tablet: The Realignment
In the Middle East, Biden is finishing what Obama started. And his top advisers are all on board.
On Sunday, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan phoned his Israeli counterpart and turned back the hands of time. According to the American readout of the conversation, Sullivan called “to express the United States’ serious concerns” about two things: the pending eviction, by court order, of a number of Palestinian families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of Jerusalem, and the weekend’s violent clashes on the Temple Mount between Israeli police and Palestinian rioters. The Biden administration, in other words, publicly asserted an American national interest in preventing the Sheikh Jarrah evictions, regardless of the dictates of Israeli law—just as Hamas was sending rockets and incendiary devices into Israel with the same message. This conscious effort to put “daylight” between the United States and Israel marked a clear return to the approach of President Barack Obama.
Sullivan’s call invites us to reopen an unresolved debate that began even before President Joe Biden took the oath of office. Is the new president forging his own path in the Middle East, or is he following in the footsteps of Obama? Until now, those who feared that his presidency might become the third term of Obama fixed their wary eyes on Robert Malley, the president’s choice as Iran envoy. When serving in the Obama White House, Malley helped negotiate the Iran nuclear deal, which sought accommodations with Tehran that came at the expense of America’s allies in the Middle East. In a revealing Foreign Affairs article, written in 2019, Malley expressed regret that Obama failed to arrive at more such accommodations. The direction of Obama’s policy was praiseworthy, Malley wrote, but his “moderation” was the enemy of his project. Being “a gradualist,” he presided over “an experiment that got suspended halfway through.”
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WNU editor: Needless to say. The above is my must read post for today.
3 comments:
J Street Demands Biden Maintain Muslim Occupation of Jewish Homes
Those homes were were owned by Jews a 100 years before the birth of Israel. It has taken almost 50 years to undo what the Jordanians did from 1948 to 1967. Those properties were bought under Ottoman rule and Ottoman law. That means the Jews operated and obeyed law as laid down by Muslim Majority government. Meaning their possession of the property is straight forward and legal.
If the Palestinians and The Left want a general war to involve all nations, they have a right to be pigheaded.
You would figure a mimeograph machine whose son served in the IDF would have something to say. Having a son in the IDF is all undone by voting for Obama or voting for his 3rd term. I think the guy is a poser.
"The situation in Sheikh Jarrah is cut and dried. Buildings in the neighborhood that were purchased by Jews 146 years ago were illegally seized in 1948 by Jordan as its forces illegally occupied eastern, northern and southern Jerusalem in the course of the pan-Arab invasion of the nascent Jewish state. During the course of Jordan’s illegal occupation of those areas of Jerusalem, the Jordanian Registry of Enemy Property illegally leased the Jewish-owned buildings to Arab tenants."
Obama is a pissant.
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