There is one surefire way to succeed in the Middle East, and it certainly does not run through Tehran.
By Amnon Lord, ISRAEL HAYOM 01-20-2021 09:40
The rise of the Biden administration and the current situation in the United States raises more concerns than hope.
New York Times columnist Bret Stephens this week published a comprehensive essay on US policy in the Middle East, and his advice to the new president is: “Please Don’t Mess Up the Abraham Accords.”
But a more interesting part of the article is his description of the rise of Israel in the Middle East and the retreat and recklessness of the United States.
Israel’s rise since the bombing of the nuclear reactor in Syria in 2007 has mainly occurred under the helm of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Whereas the goal of de facto ending the Israeli-Arab conflict was achieved together, with impetus from President Donald Trump. Both Netanyahu and Trump acted against globally accepted institutional perceptions.
The achievement came about after two terms of former US President Barack Obama, who acted contrary to the national interests of the United States, and especially Middle Eastern countries. Now President-elect Joe Biden appears to be starting Obama’s third term.
He is being used by fanatics in a political party that is based on lies of systematic racism in society. The Republican party, the Right, the conservatives, anything that is identified as “white” falls under the democratic ideology of “white supremacy.” At least in the best-case scenario. In the worst-case scenario: “Nazism.”
Co-founder of Black Lives Matter Alicia Garza has recently published a book. The revolutionary movement is the rear engine of the Democratic party. She sees the new radical black movement as a generation of activists that are “being shaped by the conservative consensus and the Right’s rise to power.”
This, 32 years after President Ronald Reagan’s retirement and after the lengthy terms of Democratic presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, who was obviously a leftist. According to Garza’s worldview, she sees “increased repressions, a retrenchment of systemic racism, and increasingly predatory forms of capitalism.” One book reviewer wrote that Garza’s goal is nothing less than to uproot, transform and radically rebuild America as reflected in her vision.
Biden is considered a pragmatist, but thus far there have been forces stronger than him in the Democratic party. Returning to the nuclear deal seems more like a belief of the party’s Obamist elite rather than part of the reexamination of the US policy in the Middle East.
If the United States jumps back into a nuclear deal, relations between Israel and the Arab countries will be strengthened, especially with those in the Abraham Accords. Meanwhile, America will bring us closer to the danger of war.
Biden has so much on his plate in rehabilitating the country’s inner workings and dealing with the pandemic, that there’s a good chance he will avoid fixing that which is not only not broken but is actually functioning well. Restoring the nuclear deal will not be seen as a success but as a surrender. Success – that is what everyone wishes for the new president. There is one surefire way to succeed in the Middle East, and it’s certainly not through Tehran.
Yes, his prison term
The Biden inauguration:
1. Record crowds.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EsLy_b3XcAEr2-y?format=jpg&name=large
2. Gala parade.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EsM7-FHXUAMnP2o?format=jpg&name=small
Greg Kelly @gregkellyusa·
1h A parade with no people watching. This is pathetic, spooky, and weird. What the hell is going on. Tonight ?@newsmax
?
3. Military support.
https://twitter.com/i/status/1352003640534429697
Majority of the military turning their backs on Biden as the Biden motorcade drove by
Yes. It’s been announced that he is appointing Obama retreads to his cabinet for over a month now. This article is uninformative.