Posted by
Huck PAC on Wednesday, August 19, 2009 3:52:17 PM
By Mike Huckabee
Since my 10 ½ year term as Governor or Arkansas ended in January 2007,
I have not held any public office or represented our government in any
capacity. This past week I’ve had the pleasure of visiting Israel for
the eleventh time since 1973, and am already planning my next visit
this coming January. As one of the more than half a million American
tourists who visit Israel each year, I went purely as a private
citizen, representing no government or business interests.
Yet
for some reason I can’t understand, my tourist jaunt is being compared
to Nancy Pelosi’s diplomatic mission to Syria in April of 2007. The two
trips couldn’t be more different.
First, there is our
difference in status. Speaker Pelosi visited as a sitting government
official, and not just any old member of Congress, but as the Speaker
of the House of Representatives. The Speaker is one of the
highest-ranking leaders of our country and is second in line to assume
the presidency. So there is a world of difference between my traveling
as a private citizen and Nancy Pelosi’s traveling in her official
capacity as Speaker.
Second, there is the stark contrast
between the countries visited. Syria is one of our most implacable
enemies and is on the State Department’s list as a state sponsor of
terror. The State Department made it clear to Speaker Pelosi before her
trip that they did not want her to go. Israeli officials were described
as “shocked” by her visit to Syria. By contrast, Israel is one of our
closest allies and friends. No one in the Obama Administration asked me
not to go. Frankly, I don’t think anybody cared that I was going, and I
see no reason why they should.
Third, there is the difference
in the purpose of the trips. Speaker Pelosi went specifically to hold
formal talks with Syrian President Bashar Assad. I did not meet with
Prime Minister Netanyahu. I did not negotiate with anybody about
anything –I didn’t even negotiate over the price of a few souvenirs
because I did not shop.
As a private citizen, I have commented
on what I have seen based on my past experiences. When I visited Israel
in the 1970’s and 1980’s I had no problem visiting Nablus. But this
time, I couldn’t go because I was with Israelis, and they cannot enter
Nablus or Bethlehem or Ramallah. I commented on this because I thought
it was remarkable that there are places Israelis can’t go in their own
country.
Just as I believe that Israelis should be able to
travel to all parts of their country, I believe they should be able to
live wherever they want in that country, and that the U. S. government
should not tell an Israeli family that they can’t add a nursery to
their house when they welcome a new baby, or tell an Israeli village
that they can’t add a classroom to their schoolhouse. As a private
citizen, I disagree, and I have a right to disagree, with President
Obama’s demand for a freeze on Israel’s building new settlements, and
with his further demand for a freeze on expansion of existing
settlements, despite the natural growth that a community experiences.
His call for such a complete freeze contradicts the policy not just of
President Bush, but of President Clinton, indeed of all our presidents
since Israel’s victory in the 1967 war.
President Obama’s
unprecedented stance toward Israel doesn’t just contravene the past
forty years of American policy, it contravenes his own statements as a
presidential candidate.
I visited a planned housing
development in East Jerusalem that President Obama is insisting not be
built because he seems to anticipate that Jerusalem will be divided and
this area will go to the Palestinians. Yet in June 2008, candidate
Obama told the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (“AIPAC”) that
“Jerusalem will remain the capital of Israel, and it must remain
undivided.”
In 2007, then-Senator Obama assured AIPAC that “we
should never seek to dictate what is best for the Israelis and their
security interests. No Israeli Prime Minister should ever feel dragged
to or blocked from the negotiating table by the United States. We must
be partners….” And in 2008, he promised AIPAC that “We will also use
all elements of American power to pressure Iran.” But when President
Obama announced his new settlement policy, he coupled it with an
implied threat that unless the Israelis capitulated, he might retaliate
by not doing as much as he could to stop Iran from getting nuclear
weapons. He sounded ominously like Tony Soprano.
In 2008
President Obama also told AIPAC that he was “a true friend of Israel.”
He emphasized his “strong commitment to make sure that the bond between
the United States and Israel is unbreakable today, tomorrow and
forever.” He said that “as president, I will work with you to ensure
that this bond is strengthened. … I will bring to the White House an
unshakeable commitment to Israel’s security.” When he said that Israel
“can advance the cause of peace” by not “building new settlements” if
that was “consistent with its security,” he said nothing about
expanding existing settlements, and, more importantly, he spoke as if
settlement policy was entirely up to the Israeli government, not the U.
S. government.
As a candidate President Obama never told the
American people that if he was elected, he would order a draconian
freeze on all settlement activity with no exceptions. He never told the
American people that he would move U. S. policy backward by reneging on
the understanding by Presidents Clinton and Bush that Israel would
never give up all settlements, but would keep some close to the 1949
armistice line by swapping land.
But after a meeting with
Prime Minister Netanyahu in May, President Obama announced that,
“Settlements have to be stopped in order for us to move forward.” With
whom are the Israelis supposed to move forward? With the Hamas
terrorists of the Gaza Strip? With Fatah’s Mahmoud Abbas who barely
controls the sidewalk in front of his office in the West Bank? Yet
President Obama took the ball out of the Palestinians’ court and said
that it wasn’t their wanton destruction of life and property that was
holding back the peace process, no, it was Israeli construction.
Nothing about the Palestinians’ recognizing Israel’s basic right to
exist or renouncing terror to move the process forward, no, it was all
the fault of those pesky settlements.
In case the Arab world
didn’t get that message of “blame the victim” loud and clear, President
Obama reiterated it in his major address in Cairo on June 4: “The
United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli
settlements.” Interesting use of the word “legitimacy” to a group of
people who don’t accept the legitimacy of Israel herself. A little wink
and nod there.
Not only isn’t President Obama helping the
peace process, he is hurting it by telling the Palestinians that there
is no reason for them to do anything but wait for Israel to make
unilateral concessions under American pressure. Such pressure must be
contrasted with the partnership we’ve always had with Israel, the one
he pledged to continue when he was looking for American votes, not Arab
approval.
cross posted on
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