Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: Bush's Limp Protest of
Israeli Settlements Echoes Father's Limp Protest, Eons Ago via
Mondoweiss by Philip Weiss on 1/14/08
In 1991 President George H.W. Bush tried to stop Israeli settlements by
linking American loan guarantees to the Jewish state with a freeze on
the settlements. Pro-Israel groups in this country went haywire, and
Bush backed down, and famously complained about "all these lobbyists on
the Hill," or words to that effect. Bush lost the presidency the
following year and by some accounts, his loss was dealt by Jewish
groups in the U.S.

His successor Bill Clinton wisely left Israel/Palestine issues till the
bitter lame duck end of his 8-year presidency.

Clinton's successor George W. Bush wisely left the Israel/Palestine
issues till the bitter lame duck end of his 8-year presidency.

At which time--last weekend--the younger Bush said that the newest
Israeli settlements "ought to go."

Do you see the pattern? I thought my country was a superpower. It's not
in this area. Our presidents are weaklings, our politics are broken.
It's no wonder that two international relations scholars stopped
considering the issue as one of international relations and looked at
it as an outgrowth of domestic politics: Mearsheimer and Walt, who
penned The Israel Lobby.

In his new book, They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons,
Jacob Heilbrunn writes that in some part for religious reasons, the
neocons have never believed in the peace process or the sacrifice of
Israeli lands to the Palestinians. Heilbrunn states that the movement
of the neocons to Reagan from Carter in '80 and from Bush to Clinton
in '92 helped to elect both challenger candidates. Did you hear that?
The switch of the neocons from Carter to Reagan--crossing party lines
in 1980--then the switch back across party lines in '92, both times
because of the Israel issue, was an important factor in presidential
politics in those elections, helping to unseat an incumbent President.
No wonder Clinton and Bush let well enough alone till 7 years had
passed.


This is not a conspiracy theory, it's just hardball. The problem is
that only religious crazies and rightwing Israelis get to play, and the
rest of us sit in the bleachers. That is the question that should be
asked of the new New York Times columnst, Bill Kristol (who served in
the White House under Bush I): Why have you supported the illegal
settlements? Why have our presidents who opposed them been able to do
nothing about them for lo these many decades?

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