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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Obama and the 'myth of linkage'

Noah Pollak, who inspired my very first post about Democratic Presidential candidate Barack Hussein Obama's foreign policy team, and who first alerted me to the existential danger this man poses to the State of Israel, has written a piece on Commentary's Contentions blog in which he shows how Obama has adopted what Pollak calls the 'myth of linkage.' Linkage is the notion that if only the 'Palestinian problem' were 'solved' (How? By ending the existence of the State of Israel?), the Arab world in its entirety would suddenly support American foreign policy goals. But 'linkage' is nothing but a mirage that is promoted by the Arab world and the US State Department to accomplish by diplomacy what they could not accomplish on the battlefield: Israel's destruction (Hat Tip: Hot Air).
In this worldview, the ineffectiveness of Arab states as U.S. allies is due primarily to genuine — as opposed to claimed — objections over the lack of American involvement in the conflict, as if America’s failure to “create” a Palestinian state is because 15 years of Madrid, Oslo, Camp David, the Road Map, Annapolis, and billions of dollars in foreign aid represent an insufficient dedication of resources to the conflict. In this worldview, Iran “uses” Hamas and Hezbollah to “stir up mischief,” a state of affairs which can be changed through a peace process. Obama apparently doesn’t believe that Hamas and Hezbollah are allied with Iran because all three share a very clear and unappeasable goal: ridding the Middle East of Israel and America. Does Obama really believe that Hamas and Hezbollah can be co-opted by a peace process?
Given that the hopelessly naive Obama still believes he can talk Iran out of continuing their nuclear enrichment program, it is entirely possible that he is foolish enough to believe that Hamas and Hezbullah can be co-opted by a 'peace process.'

Read it all.

UPDATE 1:25 AM

Martin Kramer points out that Obama was converted to being an adherent of 'linkage' by Jordanian King Abdullah whom Obama described as "as savvy an analyst of the region and player in the region as, as there is." Kramer points out that the same Abdullah has explained 'linkage' to the media before:
This same savvy King Abdullah, in a CNN interview the day after 9/11, offered up the ultimate linkage thesis, when asked whether the attacks would have happened if Israelis and Palestinians had reached a peace agreement at Camp David in July 2000:
I don’t believe so, because I think that if you had solved the problems of the Middle East, and obviously the core issue is that between the Israelis and Palestinians, I doubt very much that this incident would have taken place, and again, that was a reminder to all of us and why I think so many of us in the international community have been working so hard to bring a stop to the violence and bring people back to the peace process, because, in a vacuum, you do allow the extremists the upper hand and the chance to try things as what happened yesterday. And they will continue on trying until we can solve the problem once and for all.
Savvy indeed.
Anyone still need proof that 'linkage' is mythological? I didn't think so.

2 Comments:

At 1:45 AM, Blogger NormanF said...

Israel's enemies have tried to promote such a linkage for decades. The point is that even if the Palestinians obtained a reichlet, Muslim hostility to Israel's existence is not going to just disappear.

 
At 3:19 AM, Blogger Kae Gregory said...

To say that Obama believes in "linkage" I believe is way off target. I believe he knows exactly what he is doing and that is using a sellable point (linkage) to achieve an incremental goal, that being getting Israel to turnover as much land as possible peacefully, making their ultimate goal that much easier.

 

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