It’s Lucy and the football, Iran-style. After ostensibly tough talk about preventing Iran from going nuclear, the Obama administration acquiesced to yet another round of talks with the mullahs.

This, 14 months after the last group-of-six negotiations collapsed in Istanbul because of blatant Iranian stalling and unseriousness. Nonetheless, the new negotiations will be both without precondition and preceded by yet more talks to decide such trivialities as venue.

These negotiations don’t just gain time for a nuclear program about whose military intent the IAEA is issuing alarming warnings. They make it extremely difficult for Israel to do anything about it (while it still can), lest Israel be universally condemned for having aborted a diplomatic solution.

If the administration was serious about achievement rather than appearance, it would have warned that this was the last chance for Iran to come clean and would have demanded a short timeline. After all, President Obama insisted on deadlines for the Iraq withdrawal, the Afghan surge and Israeli-Palestinian negotiations. Why leave these crucial talks open-ended when the nuclear clock is ticking?

This re-engagement comes immediately after Obama’s campaign-year posturing about Iran’s nukes. Sunday in front of AIPAC, he warned that “Iran’s leaders should have no doubt about the resolve of the United States.” This just two days after he’d said (to the Atlantic magazine) of possible U.S. military action, “I don’t bluff.” Yet on Tuesday he returns to the very engagement policy that he admits had previously failed.

Won’t sanctions make a difference this time, however? Sanctions are indeed hurting Iran economically. But when Obama’s own director of national intelligence was asked by the Senate intelligence committee whether sanctions had any effect on the course of Iran’s nuclear program, the answer was simple: No. None whatsoever.

Obama garnered much AIPAC applause by saying that his is not a containment policy but a prevention policy. But what has he prevented? Keeping a coalition of six together is not success. Holding talks is not success. Imposing sanctions is not success.

Success is halting and reversing the program. Yet Iran is tripling its uranium output, moving enrichment facilities deep under a mountain near Qom and impeding IAEA inspections of weaponization facilities.

So what is Obama’s real objective? “We’re trying to make the decision to attack as hard as possible for Israel,” an administration official told the Washington Post in the most revealing White House admission since “leading from behind.”

Revealing and shocking. The world’s greatest exporter of terror (according to the State Department), the systematic killer of Americans in Iraq and Afghanistan, the self-declared enemy that invented “Death to America Day” is approaching nuclear capability — and the focus of U.S. policy is to prevent a democratic ally threatened with annihilation from pre-empting the threat?

Indeed it is. The new open-ended negotiations with Iran fit well with this strategy of tying Israel down. As does Obama’s “I have Israel’s back” reassurance, designed to persuade Israel and its supporters to pull back and outsource to Obama what for Israel are life-and-death decisions.

Yet 48 hours later, Obama tells a news conference that this phrase is just a historical reference to supporting such allies as Britain and Japan — contradicting the intended impression he’d given AIPAC that he was offering special protection to an ally under threat of physical annihilation.

To AIPAC he declares that “no Israeli government can tolerate a nuclear weapon in the hands of a regime that denies the Holocaust, threatens to wipe Israel off the map and sponsors terrorist groups committed to Israel’s destruction” and affirms “Israel’s sovereign right to make its own decisions … to meet its security needs.”

And then he pursues policies — open-ended negotiations, deceptive promises of tough U.S. backing for Israel, boasts about the efficacy of sanctions, grave warnings about “war talk” — meant, as his own official admitted, to stop Israel from exercising precisely that sovereign right to self-protection.

Yet beyond these obvious contradictions and walk-backs lies a transcendent logic: As with the Keystone pipeline postponement, as with the debt-ceiling extension, as with the Afghan withdrawal schedule, Obama wants to get past Nov. 6 without any untoward action that might threaten his re-election.

For Israel, however, the stakes are somewhat higher: the very existence of a vibrant nation and its six million Jews. The asymmetry is stark. A fair-minded observer might judge that Israel’s desire to not go gently into the darkness carries higher moral urgency than the political future of one man, even if he is president of the United States.

Charles Krauthammer’s email address is letters@ charleskrauthammer.com.

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31 Comments

      1. I agree completely!  We’ve supported Israel for over 60 years now with our money and American blood.  I’m not anti-semtic nor pro-Palestinian.  What I am is sick and tired of Israel.  I am constantly amazed at the influence that country wields over our country.  AIPAC is a foreign lobby group staffed by Americans and yet they are able to influence us and our national priorities.  This should be illegal!  And what do we get for 60 years of support?  Nothing!  We ask that they stop new settlements on land that isn’t theirs and they say no.  We ask that they make peace with their neighbors and they say no.  It is long since past the time when America should say NO to Israel.

      2.  Yeah, why waste money on friends who are a pluralistic, democratic society that values women, when we can let them hang out there and get nuked by a theocratic misogynistic state called Iran.

          1. Currently, we are offering aid to Israel, and to it’s Arab neighbors
            who are hostile to it. I believe we should reduce aid to Israel, and
            ELIMINATE aid to Arab nations who are hostile to it.
            The silliness of the current situation, is that if Israel and Egypt went to war right now, both sides would be using U.S. weapons. The Arab nations have our oil money, they don’t need any other help from us. Israel has a strong economy, they don’t need nearly as much help from us as they once did.

          1. Good point.  Only Jews can vote in Israel.  I guess that’s part of the problem isn’t it.  If the Palestinians weren’t disenfranchised perhaps things would have turned out different.

          2. Actually, that is not true. About 20% of eligible Israeli voters are Arab. 14 Arabs currently serve in the Knesset (Parliament), and there is currently an Arab sitting on the Israeli Supreme Court.

          3. You’re right, thank you for the correction.  However there are still a great many residents who have been disenfranchised.

      1. I would say the world owes them the unquestioned right to exist.  Within what borders and at what cost to the people who live within those borders are another issue.

        1. I agree with that as much as I would agree that the Palestinians or any other ethnic group has an unquestioned right to exist.  However I do not think we owe them a “guarantee” of existence irrespective of how they conduct their foreign affairs anymore than we should guarantee the existence of any other country.  Yes, we have treaty’s and that is good.  But when a country does not work for the common good of the participants it’s time to re-evaluate such a treaty.  Look, I am not pro-Palestinian nor I am not anti-Israel.  However I am anti-it is incumbent upon the world to take responsibility for Israel.  The US, indeed most of the western world, has carried their butt for 60 years and for all our effort we don’t even get their respect.  Enough already!

    1. This is a good point. Our support of Israel is unconditional (so it seems), but it’s a one way relationship. The United States has to ask itself, objectively, what do we get out of this relationship? Our support should reflect the strategic benefit.

      If there is any indication Iran has a weapon, Israel will draw us into a war, whether we like it or not. Because our support is unconditional, they know we will back them if they make a preemptive strike, and this gives them the ultimate power with regard to Iran. We need to make it clear to Israel that WE make the decisions regarding our own national interests and that we will not support a preemptive strike. Until we assert independence, Israel will determine our Middle East policy.

      1. Currently, we are offering aid to Israel, and to it’s Arab neighbors
        who are hostile to it. I believe we should reduce aid to Israel, and
        ELIMINATE aid to Arab nations who are hostile to it.
        The silliness of the current situation, is that if Israel and Egypt went to war right now, both sides would be using U.S. weapons. The Arab nations have our oil money, they don’t need any other help from us. Israel has a strong economy, they don’t need nearly as much help from us as they once did.

        1. Well said.  I would differ only in that I’d stop aid to Israel too.  They DO have a strong economy and we’ve been propping up their butt forever.  Time to let go.

  1. Yeah, like Barack Obama can control what has been festering for 5000 years plus. Now they have the ‘bomb’. Surprisingly it has not been dropped but eventually it will.

    1. Please note that Isreal has many nukes that they have developed illegaly, and has defied more UN resolutions that any country in that region.

  2. What would Andrew Jackson have done?

       He would tell them ALL to move west in 90 days at which time he would nuke the entire region and anyone left the consequences would be on them.

  3. Time to take Isreal off US welfare. If they want a war then let them fight it. We should not let them drag us into it. We don’t need to dance to the AIPAC’s tune, It would be the tail waging the dog. Obama is absolutely right if he in fact is trying to stop Isreal.

    1. This will send a real strong signal both to our enemies and allies.  How long do you think it would be before the Chinese would take over Taiwan

      1. My understanding is that at least Taiwan shows a little courtesy for our efforts.  Not so with Israel.  Israel thumbs their nose at us when we talk to them.  Did you see how rude Netanyahu was in front of the camera with our President?  Then he goes to his disciples at the AIPAC lobby and told them Israel will do whatever the heck they want regardless of America’s largess towards them.  Outrageous!  Want to keep China out of Taiwan?  Stop buying their products.  That puts them at an economic disadvantage and might actually create some jobs here in America.

      2.  China take over Taiwan?  They have no reason to.  They get everything they want from Taiwan now.  They get unfettered access to their markets.  This is crazy talk.  Do you know anything at all about Taiwan and China?  China is not ideological,  they are completely pragmatic.  They have 1.3B people to feed and know that is easier to do with harmony than strife.  Their control over human rights only seeks to perpetuate their power balance not advance some religious ideal or anything like that.  They have no moral imperatives at work, whatsoever.  You seem to understand southeast Asia as well as you do this president.  Not impressed.

  4. That part of the world has remained a supplier of our lifeline of fuel, a spoke in a wheel of U.S. policy, and the purveyor of democratic ideals as long as it has because of the bi-lateral and symbiotic relationship between our two countries. Our support for Israel, since the administration of Harry Truman doesn’t exist for altruistic ideals but for very real benefits for both countries. Viewing the continuing fallacy of an “Arab Spring” reinforces the turmoil, U.S. hatred, and religious bigotry that would permeate the entire region and negatively impact us all if not for the presence and our support for Israel. For those of us who prevailed through the gasoline outages of the 1970s, a region without a positive relationship with the U.S. is frightening. The current president is attempting to revamp this relationship as fervently as he is to steer us toward global dominance of our way of life and the reduction of the liberties that have always set us apart. In the history of this planet we are the most noble of successes, a way of life that belies most every civilization in our history, and one that is most unlike anything that exists today. We continue to exist for many reasons, most notably the excellence of those who live in this great land. Do not underestimate the value of maintaining certain relationships within the world that help continue our way of life, most notably our relationship with the small country tucked between so many others who despise who we are and what we maintain. Ken

    1. My hunch is we’d get more petroleum out of the mid-East if we did not support Israel.  And it would cost a whole lot less because we wouldn’t need to spend our money and American blood on keeping the mid-East calm just so we could buy their oil AND support a country which only uses America for what it can get.

  5. Nobama would allow Israel to be destroyed if he could be re-elected.  There has never been a President with as little credibility when it comes to being taken seriously on foreign matters (leading from behind).  Israel and the world have been pushed to this edge due to the Assassin in Chief’s utter incompetence and inexperience outside Chicago filthy politics.

    1. America SHOULD leave Israel to it’s own fate.  Ingrates that they are!  Enough is enough.  Unfortunately you are mistaken (again!) because Obama has pledged to protect Israel.  Too bad.

    2.  flat_lander, You make it clear you only understand policy as it is reported by Rush Limbaugh.  This president has found your blind spot on foreign policy.  His approach has gotten better results, cost less and not fostered resentment around the world. 

      Iran’s nuke programs have nothing to do with Obama or Bush or America for that matter. 

      As for his experience, that is up for debate.  No president has presidential experience when taking the oath.  Any other experience is hardly preparation for what this job entails.  Considering that, he has not made any significant foreign policy decisions during very turbulent times.  By this point in Bush’s tenure, he had gone to war twice.  In neither case did he present us with an exit strategy.

      Obama has taken a hard line on terrorism and has amassed a record that is astonishing.  

      As far as anyone around the world taking this president seriously, I think they do.  He has been  tougher at prosecuting the war on terror than anyone before him. 

      All of this has happened and you have recognized none of it.  Maybe you are biased against the man for some reason…….You may want to at least be honest with yourself about that.  AS for filthy politics, baseless attacks against the commander in chief who has consistently shown deference to the welfare of our troops is about as filthy as it gets!  I think you and OBL both underestimate the man.

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