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ProSense

(116,464 posts)
Mon Nov 25, 2013, 08:50 PM Nov 2013

Netanyahu’s awkward isolation

Netanyahu’s awkward isolation

By Steve Benen

Things haven’t quite gone Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s way lately.

Just a couple of months ago, after President Obama scored a diplomatic victory with Syria, Netanyahu not only expected Obama’s policy to fail, he also feared it would further embolden Iran. The opposite happened – the U.S. policy has proven effective, and it was the U.S. president’s approach to the Syrian crisis convinced Iran to come to the table.

More recently, Netanyahu tried to derail negotiations with Tehran, which didn’t work. He said any agreement would necessarily be unacceptable, which few considered credible. He demanded that the U.S. take his warnings seriously, but they fell on deaf ears. The more the Israeli leader railed against the very idea of diplomacy, the more Netanyahu found himself on the sidelines.

And now that a temporary, six-month deal is in place, Israel has been reduced to saber-rattling, threatening to strike Iran anyway, since Israel is not bound by the international agreement reached over the weekend.

Gershom Gorenberg makes the case that Netanyahu is suffering from “Agreement Anxiety Disorder” (via Ed Kilgore).

The link between Netanyahu’s reactions in September and now is what could be called Agreement Anxiety Disorder (AAD): a reflexive certainty that any time an antagonist is willing to make an agreement to end or manage a conflict, the deal is a deception. The only safe agreement would be one in which you make no compromises or concessions, so that you are ready to fight the inevitable next round. Since agreements sans compromises are rare, the very thought of making a deal ignites something between panic and fury, and any friend who advises you to accept the agreement is betraying you. <…>

With an effort at empathy, one can understand Netanyahu’s anxiety. But Agreement Anxiety Disorder does not lead to good analysis. It doesn’t produce advice that American senators or representatives should accept when choosing their own response to the Iran deal. He knows how to speak your fears, but the poor man is not thinking clearly.

In slightly larger context, the White House had also been warned that diplomacy with Iran would almost automatically derail Israeli-Palestinian talks, which have been quietly underway for several weeks. Indeed, Netanyahu had a subtle warning for Obama: if you care about the Middle East peace process, stop talking to Iran.

- more -

http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/netanyahus-awkward-isolation

Saudis offers cautious support for Iran deal
http://thehill.com/blogs/global-affairs/middle-eastnorth-africa/191323-saudis-offers-cautious-support-for-iran-deal

The Deal is for Real
http://www.democraticunderground.com/10024092699
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Netanyahu’s awkward isolation (Original Post) ProSense Nov 2013 OP
K & R Scurrilous Nov 2013 #1
Kick! n/t ProSense Nov 2013 #2
I'm no foreign policy expert panader0 Nov 2013 #3

panader0

(25,816 posts)
3. I'm no foreign policy expert
Mon Nov 25, 2013, 10:09 PM
Nov 2013

but why would Bibi not want this deal? Less nuclear threat from Iran. I think he doth protesteth too much.

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