The End of America’s Strategic Alliance with Israel
Caroline Glick:
From an Israeli perspective, Pres. Barack Obama’s speech today in Cairo was deeply disturbing. Both rhetorically and programmatically, Obama’s speech was a renunciation of America’s strategic alliance with Israel.
Rhetorically, Obama’s sugar coated the pathologies of the Islamic world — from the tyranny that characterizes its regimes, to the misogyny, xenophobia, Jew hatred, and general intolerance that characterizes its societies. In so doing he made clear that his idea of pressing the restart button with the Islamic world involves erasing the moral distinctions between the Islamic world and the free world.
In contrast, Obama’s perverse characterization of Israel — of the sources of its legitimacy and of its behavior — made clear that he shares the Arab world’s view that there is something basically illegitimate about the Jewish state.
First things first: she is right to point out that he seems to have more love for the Arab world than for Israel. He made that clear throughout his career, and did so again during his speech yesterday.
But, don’t honestly believe the speech marked “the end of America’s strategic alliance with Israel.” The US can’t afford to alienate Israel. Well, not too much, anyway. If Israel believes Obama is hurting its interests, it will simply cozy up to Russia, which would help Russia increase its sphere of influence in the Middle East tremendously. The US can’t accept that, so it has to stand by its traditional regional ally.
Or so I hope.
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