Commentary By Ron Beasley
This takes a lot of nerve not to mention hypocrisy:
Likud: US meddling in Israeli politics
US President Barack Obama's administration's criticism of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's policies has crossed the line into interfering in Israeli politics, top Likud ministers and MKs said Tuesday.
[.....]
The charges of American interference began April 16 when Yediot Aharonot quoted Obama's chief of staff Rahm Emanuel telling an unnamed Jewish leader: "In the next four years there is going to be a permanent-status arrangement between Israel and the Palestinians on the basis of two states for two peoples, and it doesn't matter to us at all who is prime minister [of Israel]."
Likud Minister-without-Portfolio Yossi Peled said Tuesday that the statement was inappropriate and was just one of many examples of American interference in Israeli politics since Netanyahu's election in February.
Of course Likud has been interfering with US politics for generations via their US proxy AIPAC. (in addition to spying) Of course as Josh Marshall reminds us they have a good reason to be upset - Israeli political parties that have a problem with a US President don't stay in power very long.
There's no shortage of discussion of the fact that there's a strong Israel lobby in the US which can exercise a great deal of pressure when a US administration applies pressure on Israel. What gets much less discussion in the US is the other side of this complex relationship. No Israeli government can last for long if it gets seriously out of step with an incumbent US administration, especially if that administration is popular at home. Indeed, over the last two decades, two Likud governments have fallen in substantial measure because they had gotten out of step with the US and were perceived in Israel as having failed to manage the US relationship -- the Shamir government in the early 90s and the first Netanyahu government in the late 1990s. As many other commentators have noted, failing to keep the US-Israel relationship on track is something akin to the 'third rail' of Israeli politics.
Standing up to Netanyahu and Likud is one of the few things Obama has done right.
Good post Ron. Too often I see posts (rarely here) that suggest that AIPAC somehow constitutes some sort of secret government that controls US foreign policy. They do enjoy some serious influence of course but it is all too rarely pointed out that Israeli governments must likewise earn the support of the US government or their majority is in peril. I think that Israelis in general are well aware that they are very dependent on the good will of whatever administration hold office in the US. There is hope in this for the two state solution.
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