Washington Watch: Now is the time for Obama to visit
Barak should stop in another Asian country: Israel. It’s a trip he should have made early in his first term and is long overdue.
By DOUGLAS M. BLOOMFIELD
President Barack Obama leaves Saturday for a three-day trip to Burma, Thailand and Cambodia.On the way home he should stop in another Asian country: Israel. It’s a trip he should have made early in his first term and is long overdue.The timing is good. He just won a decisive election victory that the Israeli prime minister tried very hard to prevent, and this would be a good time to have a heartto- heart with him and the Israeli people about his view of where the bilateral relationship is headed over the next four years.As soon as Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu recovered from the shock of his preferred candidate losing the election, he congratulated Barack Obama and told US ambassador Dan Shapiro, “I look forward to working with him to advance our goals of peace and security.”Does he really believe that after four years of sniping and trying to undermine this president and working for his defeat that Obama believes him or trusts him now? Especially since on the day before the American election Netanyahu announced he didn’t need American permission to strike Iran (as if anyone said he did), and that he was going ahead with the construction of 1,200 new homes in settlement neighborhoods of east Jerusalem that he knew would upset Washington and only strengthen the Palestinian case at the United Nations where he is depending on Obama to try to block the Palestinian Authority’s bid for membership later this month.Netanyahu was one of the big losers in this election, and elections have consequences.He has a long history of not being able to get along with Democratic presidents and collaborating with the Republican opposition to undermine them. It will take more than the kind of platitudes he delivered to ambassador Shapiro last week if Netanyahu is serious about repairing the damage.The Republicans ran a very vigorous anti-Obama campaign in the Jewish community, largely fueled by Netanyahu’s friend and financial backer Sheldon Adelson, accusing the president of not affording the prime minister the deference and policy support they felt he deserved.They got it backwards. The relationship is a two-way street, but one side of the street has wider lanes than the other. So much of Israel’s security, financial, diplomatic and political well being depend on its relationship with the United States, and when there is a prime minister in Jerusalem with a reputation for undermining that relationship, meddling in the American election and losing the trust and respect of the American president, the question has to be asked: is he a fit steward for this important alliance? It was no secret that Netanyahu preferred Mitt Romney, and the prime minister did nothing to stop Republicans from using his image and speeches in their anti-Obama ads.One Likud leader in Knesset, Danny Danon, a longtime bitter critic of Obama who came to the United States this year to encourage the president’s opponents, greeted his reelection by admonishing Obama to cease trying to “endanger” Israel and “return” to the policy of “zero daylight” between the two allies.