Republicans accuse President Obama of appeasement - and he has
appeased Israel before Netanyahu's attempted coup - but those days gone …
We have watched a joint Republican-Likud Party
coup attempt to take over President Obama’s negotiations with Iran
completely backfire, with the result that through his own actions,
Benjamin Netanyahu has seen his popularity crash both here and at home. This in turn has prompted a complete right-wing meltdown in Israel, with Netanyahu seeing plots everywhere.
In all, it was a classic, textbook case of cause-and-effect.
Republicans, however, tend to be like the
ideologically-blinkered actor Jon Voight, father of Angelina Jolie, who
is buying into Benjamin Netanyahu’s paranoia about a leftist plot to
unseat him.
On Sunday morning, Voight released a video of
support for the embattled prime minister and to the people of Israel,
claiming that President Obama “doesn’t want Bibi Netanyahu to win this
upcoming election,” and that “America has not been the same since his
presidency.”
Hasn’t been the same? You got that right: Thank you Change We Can Believe In!
Seriously, could you blame Obama if he didn’t want
Netanyahu to win? Not only on a personal level – The Israeli prime
minister just came here and dissed our president
at the invitation of his enemies in the GOP, the men who have done
everything in their power for six years to bring his presidency to a
screeching halt.
But a defeated Netanyahu would serve Obama’s
interests on a professional level as well – an Israel governed by a more
level-headed, pragmatic leader, would be less likely to draw the U.S.
into a war it does not want, and cannot afford. That sort of Israel
would be less of a strain on Obama’s pragmatic approach to diplomacy.
Voight, meanwhile, wasn’t talking to a chair, but his address was strange enough regardless.
“I love Israel. I want to see Israel survive and not be overtaken by the madmen of this world,” he begins.
Great. Power to you, Jon. I don’t want Israel to be
destroyed either. Neither do I want to see Iran destroyed. Or, more
critically, the country I am actually citizen of, the United States of
America.
It’s a shame Voight doesn’t feel the same concern
for his own country, which has a Congress controlled by madmen eager to
dismantle the world’s first modern liberal democracy and fight a few
more destructive wars along the way.
Well, to be fair start a few wars other people will
have to fight before they are denied treatment for their wounds,
physical and psychological, and cast, discarded as of no further use,
into the streets.
Voight presents the same tired appeasement spiel we
have heard from so many others who want other people to die in their
wars so the demands of ideology can be satisfied:
I beg everyone, all of you, to understand the truth: those – like Yitzhak Herzog – who believe that deal-making is the solution to what Israel faces are as wrong as Neville Chamberlain believing he made a peace deal with Hitler. We must learn from history where the true danger lies.
Reversing the facts, and thus failing to understand
the truth himself, he then claims, “President Obama does not love Israel
and his whole agenda is to control Israel, and this way he can be
friends with all of Israel’s enemies.”
Of course, the truth is, Republicans are more than
happy to hand control of U.S. foreign policy over to their fellow
right-winger Netanyahu.
Yet Voight, somehow with a straight face (credit his
acting experience here, I suppose), claims that Obama “in this way…can
be friends with all of Israel’s enemies.” Which is a bizarre claim to
make because the United States is all on its own Israel’s best and most
loyal friend, and no president more so than Barack Obama.
There is nothing – no treaty or agreement – saying
the United States is not allowed its own list of friends and enemies,
that our foreign policy must align itself completely and totally with
Israel’s own. Again, this is giving Israel control of U.S. foreign
policy, not the other way around.
Given that the U.S. will be expected to back up any
action Israel takes, the United States has a vested interest in who
Israel attacks. We’ve already destabilized the region by attacking Iraq.
Attacking Iran, the Islamic State’s staunchest foe, would give the
entire Middle East to ISIL on a platter.
And ISIL, not Iran, is Israel’s real enemy.
Voight, like John Bolton, Todd Starnes, and many other Republicans, talks about appeasement.
Honestly,
listening to the Republicans and Netanyahu, and now Voight, I think up
until now we’ve been appeasing the wrong people, and Benjamin Netanyahu
is at the head of that list.
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