Yesterday Jonathan Tobin offered a cogent analysis of
Obama-Kerry Middle East policy ineptitude on the Commentary blog.
Tobin explained:
Egypt
is coming apart at the seams. The Syrian civil war has taken the lives of over
100,000 people and the Assad regime—which President Obama has demanded give up
power—appears to be winning with the help of Russian and Iranian arms and
Hezbollah ground forces. Iran has vowed to continue enriching uranium, as it
gets closer to amassing enough to build a nuclear weapon. And the Putin
government in Russia continues to thumb its nose at the United States by
refusing—as did China—to hand over NSA leaker/spy Edward Snowden.
With
all that on its plate, you’d think America’s foreign policy chief would be up
to his neck dealing with these crises. But in case you hadn’t heard, Secretary
of State John Kerry wasn’t paying much attention to any of that in the last few
days. Instead, Kerry was
shuttling back and forth between Jerusalem and Ramallah like a
low-level functionary attempting to craft an agreement that would finally bring
the Palestinians back to the Middle East peace talks they’ve been boycotting
for four and a half years. But at the end of his fifth such effort since taking
office in February, Kerry left the region empty-handed again having failed to
convince the Palestinians to talk while claiming that he is getting closer to
success. He says just a little more effort will put him over the top, so expect
him to be back again in the near future hoping to finally achieve his
long-sought photo opportunity–though there is little reason to believe such an
event would actually bring the conflict closer to resolution.
But then, this morning’s New York Times brings us this piece
of analysis from Mark Landler and Judi Rudoren. Perhaps it will sound vaguely familiar.
Surely, it is correct:
In
Damascus, the Syrian government’s forces are digging in against rebels in a
bloody civil war that is swiftly approaching the grim milestone of 100,000 dead.
In Cairo, an angry tide of protesters again threatens an Egyptian president.
At the
same time, in tranquil Tel Aviv, Secretary of State John Kerry wrapped up a busy round
of shuttle diplomacy, laboring to revive a three-decade-old attempt at peace
negotiations between the Israelis and Palestinians. He insisted on Sunday that
he had made “real progress.”
The new
secretary of state’s exertions — reminiscent of predecessors like Henry A.
Kissinger and James A. Baker III — have been met with the usual mix of hope and
skepticism. But with so much of the Middle East still convulsing from the
effects of the Arab Spring, Mr. Kerry’s efforts raise questions about the Obama
administration’s priorities at a time of renewed regional unrest.
The
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, once a stark symbol and source of grievance in
the Arab world, is now almost a sideshow in a Middle East consumed by sectarian
strife, economic misery and, in Egypt, a democratically elected leader fighting
for legitimacy with many of his people.
Administration
officials no longer argue, as they did early in President Obama’s first term,
that ending the Israeli occupation and creating a Palestinian state is the key
to improving the standing of the United States in the Middle East. The
Israeli-Palestinian conflict is now just one headache among a multitude.
And yet
Mr. Kerry, backed by Mr. Obama, still believes that tackling the problem is
worth the effort: five visits to the region in the last three months. The most
recent trip involved nearly 20 hours of talks, stretching almost until dawn,
with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and Mahmud Abbas, the
president of the Palestinian Authority.
One is slightly surprised to see Commentary and the New York
Times on the same page, but perhaps we should just be thankful for little
things.
Both have noticed, because it’s impossible not to notice, that John Kerry is living in an alternate universe where people still believe
that the way to solve all of the world’s problems is to negotiate a peace
treaty between Israel and the Palestinians.
All the while, the Middle East burns.
One cannot help but second Barry Rubin’s analysis. The Arab
Spring has been the major foreign policy challenge of the Obama administration.
In particular, Obama chose Cairo for a major speech in 2009 where he laid down
his foreign policy markers.
As of today, the Obama reset has been such a colossal
failure that it is impossible to ignore the fact.
Rubin wrote:
Let us remember that four years ago Obama gave his
Cairo speech sitting the Muslim Brotherhood leaders in the front row. President
Husni Mubarak was insulted and it was the first hint that the Obama
Administration would support Islamist regimes in the Arab world. Then Obama
vetoed the State Department plan for a continuation of the old regime without
Mubarak. Then Obama publicly announced–before anyone asked him–that the United
States would not mind if the Brotherhood was in government. Then Obama did not
give disproportionate help to the moderates. Then Obama pressed the army to get
out of power quickly, which the moderates opposed since they needed more time
than the Islamists to organize.
Many will say that the president of the United
States cannot of course control events in Egypt. That’s true.’ But he did
everything possible to lead to this crisis.
1 comment:
All middle east problems are caused by the Israelis! How can they be so fiendishly devious as to provoke civil wars in their neighbors?
Or is this a gross misconception? (As it certainly is.)
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