Iran, Obama and Bibi’s October Surprise (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Jonathan S. Tobin 05/06/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/05/06/benefits-of-bibi-october-surprise-scenario-israel-elections-netanyahu-obama-iran-nuclear/
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On Friday, a commentator on Israel’s Channel 2 said aloud what others
had been whispering in recent days. The Times of Israel reports that
commentator Amnon Abramovich claimed today’s announcement that new
Israeli elections will be scheduled for September 4 may set in motion
a chain of events that could lead to an Israeli attack on Iran
sometime between that date and the U.S. presidential election in
November. The scenario makes sense on the surface in that if, as
expected, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu wins an easy victory in
September, he theoretically would have two months to strike Iran
while President Obama was campaigning for re-election and therefore
unlikely to condemn or punish Israel for ignoring his wishes about
the use of force to fend off Tehran’s nuclear threat.
That isn’t
likely to happen for a number of reasons, but the mere
fact that it might is a positive development. As much as there is
good reason to doubt that even under such seemingly favorable
circumstances Israel would attack Iran on its own, the election
announcement will have the salubrious effect of concentrating the
minds of President Obama and his shaky allies in the P5+1 nuclear
talks with Iran. The only reason the West has stepped up its
previously weak sanctions on Iran that led to the current lackluster
negotiations is that they believed Israel would act unless they
started behaving as if they cared about the problem. As most informed
observers have noted, the chances of the talks achieving anything
that would actually lessen the danger are slim. But if the Iranians
as well as Obama and his partners think Israel will strike in the
fall that could put tremendous pressure on both sides to do more than
diplomatic game playing.
For all of the hysterical criticism
being aimed at Netanyahu and
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak for their supposed messianism
about dealing with Iran, they have actually gone about their business
on this issue in a rational manner. By making it clear to the world
that Israel would not allow the Islamist regime to pose an
existential threat to its existence, they have forced Obama to
ratchet up his own rhetoric and to foreswear any policy
of “containing” a nuclear Iran. They have also managed to pressure
the European Union to threaten an oil embargo of Iran that would have
been unimaginable without their fear that an Israeli attack would
overturn the entire Middle East chessboard.
But Netanyahu and
Barak are also keenly aware of the danger of
pushing too far. That’s why it is equally unimaginable they would
order a strike on Iran while the West was actively conducting nuclear
negotiations. Though no one should think they would not use force as
a last resort, they have throughout this crisis made it clear they
understood it is far better for the West — whose interests are
involved in this matter as much as that of Israel — to deal with the
Iranian nuclear threat.
However, once the talks started last
month, it seemed as if Israel
had lost its leverage. The Iranians are past masters of playing
diplomatic hide and seek with credulous Western negotiators. This
round of talks started off no different than previous futile attempts
to make the ayatollahs see reason. With European Union foreign policy
chief Catherin Ashton in charge of the negotiations, there seemed
little chance the West would push the Iranians hard. With both sides
more intent on preventing an Israeli attack than on actually coming
up with a deal that would shut down Iran’s nuclear program, it seemed
likely that they would be dragged out until the end of the year when
a re-elected President Obama might have the “flexibility” to take a
less harsh view of the issue than when the votes of the pro-Israel
community were up for grabs.
But if Obama believes there is a
window for an Israeli attack in the
fall prior to November, that might scare him into forcing Ashton and
the negotiators to get tough. Though there is no reason to believe
any amount of Western pressure, sanctions or threats will persuade
Iran to give up its ambition of a nuclear weapon, Netanyahu’s
election schedule might be enough to get the West to follow through
on its oil embargo and to refuse to allow the Islamist regime to play
them for the suckers in the P5+1 talks. Rather than the September 4
election making a unilateral Israeli strike more likely, it just
might be the thing that could stiffen the spines of Obama and his
European partners during the next six months.
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