Matthew Bell

Matthew Bell

Matthew Bell is a Jerusalem-based Middle East reporter. He has been with The World since 2001 and has filed stories from cities across the US and abroad.

  • |
  • ALL POSTS

Obama Administration: Israel Should Do More to Mend Fences With its Neighbors

Play
Download


US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta (Photo: Wiki commons)

US Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta (Photo: Wiki commons)

Israel has its own concerns with Iran, and with the Arab Spring.

And its been getting advice from the Obama administration on how to deal with the uncertainty.

Israel should do more to mend fences with some of its neighbors.

That was part of a message sent by secretary of defense Leon Panetta in a recent speech. Panetta was careful not to blame Israel alone for its increasing diplomatic isolation.

But it’s a problem, Panetta explained. And he urged the Israelis to take bold action to fix it.

When he was asked what Israel should do about the long-stalled peace process with the Palestinians, Panetta said, “get to the damn table.” Panetta repeated the mantra about an unshakable US commitment to Israel’s security. But he also seemed to be asking Israel for more diplomatic effort.

Not just with the Palestinians. But with other regional players, starting with Turkey and Egypt. Israel’s relations with both countries have suffered big setbacks this year.

“I think Israelis are scratching their heads in terms of Panetta’s no doubt well-intentioned but hopelessly naïve and irrelevant admonishment,” said Yossi Klein Halevi, a foreign policy expert at the Shalom Hartman Center in Jerusalem.

He said the Obama administration is failing to grasp what the so-called Arab Spring means for Israel.

“There is nothing more frightening for Israelis when we look around the region and see the rise of Islamist regimes, which may or may not be all kinds of things,” Halevi said. “They may be pro-democratic or anti-democratic, but one thing they all are is hostile, not just to Israel’s policies, but Israel’s existence.”

These are confusing times in the Middle East. And the Obama administration appears to be in a state of confusion itself, said Jonathan Rynhold of Bar Ilan University near Tel Aviv.

In the case of Turkey, for example, Rynhold said the big reasons why its relationship with Israel has changed so much is mostly due to Turkey’s internal dynamics.

“And the same really goes for Egypt,” he added. “I mean, at the end of the day, this is a very deep change in Egyptian politics and there’s not really much that Israel can do on the strategic level.”

On the tactical level, Rynhold said Israel could use carrots and sticks with its potential partners and rivals as the region works through this period of transition. But that’s a long-term process, he said. Most of what develops in the Arab world will not be determined by outside influences.

One former Israeli diplomat has a very different view. He welcomed the speech by Panetta, because he said Israel’s current government is guilty of sitting on its hands at a critical time. The government should not be taking a wait and see approach, he said. Things are not likely to get any easier as time goes on.

Paul Hirschson, spokesman for the Israeli foreign ministry, said he’s heard this criticism before. He said there is an ongoing debate inside Israeli policy circles over whether to reach out or to pull back. At the same time, Hirschon said this might not be the time for Israel to be taking big risks.

“What’s going on in the Arab world right now, what we are calling the ‘Arab Spring’, is not about us. It’s about them,” Hirschon said. “And it’s the Arab populations taking responsibility for themselves. And the truth is that we really do need to sit on the sidelines a little bit and see how it develops.”

Maybe this will turn out to be a time for Israel to engage to its neighbors diplomatically. But if it that does happen, it’s likely to take place carefully and quietly.

Discussion

4 comments for “Obama Administration: Israel Should Do More to Mend Fences With its Neighbors”

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Y6L6FTDBJYFKOHEZCN6BO6ZEGQ dorn

    “Get to the damn table”, say Panetta. But it is Israel that has repeatedly offered talks without preconditions – as Netanyahu publicly offered at the UN. It is the Palestinian leadership that has repeatedly refused to negotiate, let alone compromise on any of its hardline positions.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Y6L6FTDBJYFKOHEZCN6BO6ZEGQ dorn

    Which “moderates” should Israel reach out to? Palestinian President  Mahmoud Abbas, who
    recently told the United Nations that he will never recognize Israel as a
    Jewish homeland? Or his Palestinian Authority, which denies Jewish
    links to Jerusalem? Or the entire Palestinian leadership, which demands
    resettlement of Arab refugees in pre-1967 Israel, and not in the West
    Bank? The latter is absurd, as there were similar numbers of Jewish
    refugees from Arab lands, and both refugee issues stemmed from Arab
    initiated wars.

    For decades, Arab regimes across the Middle East used hostility to
    Israel as the sole permissible distraction. Incoming governments are
    already abusing the conflict.  Only when incitement ends, can there be
    coexistence. One-sided Israeli concessions have not brought peace, nor
    can they,  when the Arab world has refused to compromise in return.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_Y6L6FTDBJYFKOHEZCN6BO6ZEGQ dorn

    To his credit, Matthew Bell got the balance correct today. Why didn’t Sec. of Defence Panetta reflect on how much compromise and conciliation has resulted from the US reaching out to Egypt, Turkey, … ? Have the latter conceded anything meaningful?

    I appeal to The World to report some of the virulent anti-semitism expresses by the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, let alone the Salafis. They show just what can be expected in the short to medium term.

    It will take decades for Egyptians to change their attitudes – and they are first going to live under Islamist governments that will do precious little to solve their real problems.

  • Felice1 Pace

    Dorn must be one of these young fellows paid to monitor the American Press and respond with Israeli propaganda to any story they don’t like. Too bad; we need to have a real discussion about these important issues and not a propaganda war.

    The assertion in this story that the breakdown in former good relations between Turkey and Israel is “due to Turkey’s internal dynamics” is untrue. In the year before the breakdown Israeli government officials went out of their way to insult the Turkish Foreign Minister including on Israeli TV and in a manner similarly to how they went out of their way to insult US Vice President -Biden. in this regard see: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34825873/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/t/israel-snubs-turkish-ambassador-public/ and http://www.mepc.org/another-blow-israeli-turkish-alliance.

    But this is so typical: when there is a problem it is never the Israeli’s who are responsible it is always someone else. When an individual acts that way we have a name for it: Paranoia. It is a disease no less for countries as it is for individuals.

    The historical Israeli victim story is wearing awfully thin. I’m a Zionist if that means that I support the continued existence of Israel. I’m an anti-Zionist if that means supporting the Israeli Government’s racist policies both within Israel and toward Israel’s de facto colony – the West Bank – and its large open air prison – Gaza. 

    Wake up Israeli’s: your government is not acting in your self-interest. The doors are open: stop isolating yourself, come on in out of the cold, give the Palestinians both within Israel and in the West Bank and Gaza respect and full civil rights.

    The single thing which will most advance the interests of the US and Israel in the Muslim and Arab Worlds is a free and independent Palestine and an end to official discrimination against Palestinians who are Israeli citizens.