No Iran Dissension Within Israeli Coalition (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Jonathan S. Tobin 05/09/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/05/09/no-dissension-within-israeli-coalition-on-iran-netanyahu-mofaz-obama/
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With the dust settling from Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s
brilliant political maneuver in which he vastly expanded his
coalition and his power, the question remains what will he do with it
in the next year? While Israelis seem more interested in domestic
political implications of the move, not surprisingly, most foreign
observers are focused on the impact of the new coalition on the issue
of Iran’s nuclear threat. Some of Netanyahu’s frustrated critics are
holding on to the hope that somehow the addition of Kadima head Shaul
Mofaz will moderate the prime minister’s stand on the issue. But this
is not only a misreading of Mofaz but of Netanyahu’s position.
As the prime minister demonstrated today in his meeting with European
Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, far from Mofaz’s entry
into the Cabinet acting as a restraint on him, the creation of a
government that can count on nearly 80 percent of the Knesset means
that when Netanyahu speaks now there can be no doubt that he
represents a strong consensus within his country on the issue. By
bringing Mofaz as well as Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Foreign
Minister Avigdor Lieberman to speak to Ashton, Netanyahu demonstrated
that there is across-the-board support for his demands that Iran’s
nuclear program be stopped dead in its tracks.
Ashton, a virulent critic of Israel who has been ceded control of the
P5+1 talks with Iran by President Obama, may have intended her visit
to Israel as an opportunity to mend fences so as to allow her to
continue the diplomatic minuet she is dancing with the Islamist
regime to continue unimpeded by Israeli actions. But Netanyahu used
the meeting to lay down the guidelines for the upcoming negotiations
in Baghdad. As Haaretz reported today:
During the meeting, the Israelis presented a rigid set of demands for
the Iranians, a senior Israeli official said. Netanyahu and the three
ministers told Ashton that Israel’s position leading up to the
Baghdad talks is that the talks will be considered as progress only
if they would yield an Iranian guarantee – with a clear timetable –
to halt uranium enrichment, to remove all enriched uranium out of
Iranian soil, and to dismantle the underground enrichment facility in
Fordo, which is near Qom.
In doing so, Netanyahu is attempting to box in the Western
negotiators who have given every indication that they will be happy
to allow the Iranians to drag out the talks and would be satisfied
with a deal that would leave their nuclear program intact. These
terms were delivered to Ashton, but the real audience for Israel’s
position is in Washington.
Three years ago, President Obama may have entertained hopes about
toppling Netanyahu, but now he is faced with the fact that the
Israeli is stronger than ever. Though fears about a unilateral
Israeli strike on Iran are probably exaggerated — Netanyahu would
almost certainly not contemplate such an option while Western talks
with Iran are ongoing — the new coalition will force the
administration to stop listening to dissident Israeli voices carping
at Netanyahu for his tough stance on Iran. As Haaretz also notes, the
idea that Mofaz disagrees with the prime minister on Iran is a
misperception fueled by Israeli political maneuvering:
According to a report published by Israeli newspaper Maariv on
Wednesday, several officials who took part in the coalitional
negotiations between Mofaz and Netanyahu said the two
are “coordinated” over the issue of Iran and are “of one mind” when
it comes to stopping Iran’s nuclear program.
Netanyahu knows Iran has no intention of giving up its nuclear chips
in the current talks. He now has a broad government that will back
him on any decision to take action. That places more pressure than
ever on Obama not to allow the U.S. to be dragged into an
unsatisfactory deal by Ashton that will have negative political
repercussions at home and might force Israel to act on its own.
Though the president may hope to kick the Iranian can down the road
until after the fall U.S. elections, Netanyahu’s coup may have made
it more difficult for the president to do so.
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