> Dino wrote:
>  Point is, the guy's not a friendly, lets get the country together type of
>  guy. And this is who Obama turns to for spiritual guidance.
>

Obama's position on Israel -- the litmus test for the conservative
Jewish establishment -- is the mainstream Democratic Party position.
His website says that "a clear and strong commitment to the security
of Israel... will always be my starting point" in dealing with the
Middle East. Obama supported Israel's disastrous war in Lebanon in
2006. Congressman Robert Wexler of Florida says "Obama has been an
ironclad supporter of the US-Israel relationship."

So what exactly is the problem? According to the Times, "some critics"
have "expressed concerns" that Obama's repeated statements of support
for Israel "are not heartfelt."

Number one among those critics, according to the Times, is somebody
named Ed Lasky, who writes for a website called AmericanThinker.com.

The Times failed to note that Obama's supporters include Martin
Peretz, longtime editor-in-chief of The New Republic, whose obsession
with Israel is legendary. He recently published a remarkable piece in
that magazine headlined "Can Friends of Israel--and Jews--Trust Obama?
In a word, Yes."

----------------------
The New Republic
Can Friends of Israel--and Jews--Trust Obama? by Martin Peretz
In a word, Yes.
Post Date Thursday, January 31, 2008

Florida, of course, is a different story, but back in Iowa there was
no need for Barack Obama or any other candidate to worry about the
Jewish vote. There are 7,000 Jews in the entire state, including 100
Hassidim who work a kosher meat-packing plant in Pottsville. Yet,
speaking in Des Moines on December 18, Obama cut to the essence of the
Middle East problem at a level of sophistication that ought to be a
relief, if not a rebuke, to those who fret about his lack of foreign
policy "experience." He raised three questions and answered them in a
way that no other Democratic aspirant for the nomination has done.

First: Is Israel truly ready to make the concessions necessary to
guarantee that a Palestinian state will be more than a "Potemkin
village"--a façade without depth or substance? "I'm confident," Obama
said, "that Israel is ready and willing to make some of these
concessions if they have the confidence that the Palestinians can
enforce an agreement." This is exactly right. And it is a sign that
President Obama would not pressure only one side (Israel) because the
other side (the Palestinians) are immune to American pressure. On his
way out the door in 2000, President Clinton actually had a map
color-coding the old city of Jerusalem: Israeli sovereignty on this
street, Palestinian sovereignty in that, like the delerious maps drawn
in London and Paris back in the early 20th century that burden the
Middle East and Africa to this day. Clinton coerced Ehud Barak, then
prime minister of Israel, to accept his map and make other
concessions. He got nothing out of the Palestinians. Yet even the most
moderate Palestinians now assume that future discussions will start
where Clinton left off. It is good to know that Obama understands why
that won't work.

The second question is whether any agreement negotiated with
Palestinian leaders can be enforced on the Palestinian people. Most
Israelis are ready to make a deal and abide by it. There is no such
disposition among Palestinians. Hamas, the party that won the most
recent Palestinian elections and that already rules in Gaza,
explicitly rejects any deal with Israel. So what do you do? Obama's
answer, and the right one: You deal with the official Palestinian
leadership, which is willing to deal, but you pressure them to take
action on other fronts that will bring the people back from Hamas. We
"have to make sure that Abbas and Fayad and those that are controlling
the West Bank still actually start delivering something tangible that
is benefiting the lives of Palestinians in the West Bank, that they
are ridding [their party] Fatah of the corruption that has been
endemic and are put in a stronger position politically so Hamas is not
dictating the terms of Palestinian negotiations but the moderates in
the Palestinian camp are dictating what the Palestinian people are
willing to go along with."

Third, is this an opportunity to watch democracy flower in the Middle
East as George W. Bush has dreamed? Well maybe, in a thousand years or
so. Meanwhile, Obama grasps that any accord will require strong
leadership and even some "dictating" from the moderates. This is not
callous. It is realistic. But only if the Palestinian leadership
realizes that "now is the time for them to step out of the ideological
blind alley that they've been in for so long." The Israelis have
stepped out of their own blind alley of small settlements and lonely
outposts planted in densely populated Palestinian areas. Everyone
knows how very much actual land Israel will give up so that Palestine
can be Palestine. No one yet knows whether the Palestinians are ready
to let Israel be Israel.

Obama's points, which he has made many times, should reassure anyone
who is concerned about what his presidency would mean for the security
of Israel. And yet many are not reassured. They are alarmed by
e-mails, saying that Obama's middle name is Hussein (true, and so
what?), that he is a Muslim and not a Christian (untrue, and so what
if it was?), that he took the oath of office as a Senator on the Koran
rather than the Bible (utterly untrue and, once again, so what?). All
these charges have been aired and negated often enough that anyone
interested in hearing the truth about them has heard it. But another
charge, circulating on the Internet, has not yet been sufficiently
refuted. This is that he has advisers on the Middle East who despise
Israel.

Let's take one example. There are all kinds of spooky rumors that a
man named Robert Malley is one of Obama's advisers, specifically his
Middle East adviser. His name comes up mysteriously and intrusively on
the web, like the ads for Viagra. Malley, who has written several
deceitful articles in The New York Review of Books, is a rabid hater
of Israel. No question about it. But Malley is not and has never been
a Middle East adviser to Barack Obama. Obama's Middle East adviser is
Dan Shapiro. Malley did, though, work for Bill Clinton. He was deeply
involved in the disastrous diplomacy of 2000. Obama at the time was in
the Illinois State Senate. So, yes, this is a piece of experience that
Obama lacks.

Martin Peretz is the editor-in-chief of The New Republic.

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