The Consensus on Jerusalem and Obama

Jonathan S. Tobin, Commentary/Contentions...

Leftists in both Israel and the United States would like President Obama to try and impose a peace plan on Israel in his second term. But the main plank of any American or international diktat is something that the vast majority of Israelis will not accept: division of Jerusalem.

Earlier today, Evelyn Gordon wrote about how the woman leading the Labor Party back to political relevance has similar positions to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the peace process. But Shelly Yacimovich isn’t the only rising star of Israeli politics that wants no part of any Obama diktat. Haaretz reports today that Yair Lapid, the head of the new centrist party Yesh Atid, went even further than Yacimovich.

Lapid said yesterday that he explicitly opposes the division of Jerusalem and that retention of the united city by Israel is not an obstacle to the signing of a peace agreement with the Palestinians. This is significant not just because it shows that Israeli centrists are competing with Netanyahu for votes by taking allegedly right-wing stands on peace process issues, but also because it runs completely contrary to one of the firmest positions articulated by the Obama administration in the last four years.

If there has been one point of contention with Israel on which the president has pushed the envelope farther than any of his predecessors it is Jerusalem. While all American governments have refused to recognize Israeli sovereignty over the entire city, let alone over those parts of it that were occupied by Jordan from 1949 to 1967 commonly known as East Jerusalem, Obama has gone further than that. Previous administrations had tacitly accepted the Jewish neighborhoods in the eastern part of the city, most of which are 40 or more years old, as de facto parts of Israel. By contrast, Obama has treated these neighborhoods as being the equivalent of the most remote hilltop settlement in the West Bank.


It was over a housing project in one of these existing Jewish city neighborhoods that the president started a major ruckus with Israel because the announcement of the approval came during a visit by Vice President Biden. This supposed “insult” to Biden became a diplomatic crisis that supposedly demonstrated the extremism of Netanyahu. Yet as Lapid’s statement shows, Netanyahu’s position on the city still represents a solid consensus of Israeli public opinion, not just that of the settler minority.

I think Lapid is wrong when he says the Palestinian Authority will consent to a peace deal that leaves Jerusalem under Israeli sovereignty, since it’s quite clear that neither the PA under Mahmoud Abbas nor its Hamas rivals will recognize the legitimacy of a Jewish state under any circumstances. But the Lapid statement also shows why President Obama’s attempts to undermine Netanyahu politically have failed. Though Israelis don’t want their leaders to be entangled in disputes with their only ally, they resented the president’s stand on their capital and backed Netanyahu.

If Lapid, whose party may turn out to be the third biggest in the next Knesset now that Avigdor Lieberman’s Yisrael Beiteinu has merged with Likud (Yacimovich’s Labor is the likely runner-up), is in agreement with Netanyahu on Jerusalem, it’s clear that the overwhelming majority of the Israeli public will not accept one of the key provisions in every plan that is put forward as a solution to be imposed on the Israelis: division of the city. That’s something that would remain true even if, as is quite unlikely, former Kadima leader Tzipi Livni were able to persuade President Shimon Peres to step down and lead a new anti-Netanyahu alliance in the January elections.

Though Netanyahu is not in as strong a position as he was a few months ago, the notion that the Israeli center rejects his position on peace is a leftist delusion. Quite the contrary, it is time for those who call themselves friends of Israel but wish to override its democratic system to ponder why they are so out of touch with the views of most Israelis.

November 11, 2012 | 8 Comments »

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8 Comments / 8 Comments

  1. Bernard Ross says:

    “Is the site you quoted generally a reliable source of info?” 

    They quoted Haaretz correctly.Gaza a State?  Why would they declare a state and lose all the goodies and freebees they now get? 

    If a state attacked Israel with rockets and missiles Israel would probably not hesitate to respond correctly, then again maybe not.

  2. Agree with Belman, except the US is not Israel’s only ally. Canada is also an ally but even more; Canada has become Israel’s only friend.

  3. Guys, you are so uninformed!

    You make so much fuss about a city that is not even Israel’s capital.

    Don’t you ever read the Guardian or watch the BBC?

    If you did, you would have known that your capital is Tel Aviv.

  4. Ehud Barak Approves Plans to Build 500 New Housing Units in Itamar

    On Monday 12th November, Haaretz Israeli newspaper revealed that Israeli
    Defence Minister, Ehud Barak, has agreed on a plan to build 538 new
    housing units in Itamar.Haaretz obtained documents that confirm that the construction of the settlement, which was founded in 1984.No legal building permits can be issued.

    Yet since the murder of five members of the Fogel family on the settlement in March 2011, the Council of Jewish Communities of Judea and Samaria has approved on the construction of new housing units.
    According to the documents obtained, a meeting took place on
    September 24 in Barak’s office to discuss the new plan for Itamar. It
    was decided to retroactively approve 137 homes that are already built
    without permits, and to build an additional 538 homes.

  5. Obama should stop meddling. He’s made a complete mess of the entire Middle East, and the one place he should have meddled, during the demonstrations in Iran, he did not. Everything he does, he just makes things worse. 

  6. Lapid and Yacimovich aren’t taking “right-wing” positions regarding Jerusalem. That’s a completely mainstream, centrist Israeli position. If western politicians and diplomats are too dishonest or too f***ing stupid to understand that, it’s their problem

  7.  I find this new system totally confusing and haywire.  the system left out most of the comment I will try again
    <blockquote cite=””>it is time for those who call themselves friends of Israel but wish to override its democratic system to ponder why they are so out of touch with the views of most Israelis.<blockquote cite=””>
    Perhaps if the Israeli govt acted as if jews in YS were not criminals.  Perhaps if “most israelis” demand the govt follow their views and have a tent city for YS as they do for economy.