Obama Struggles to Keep Pace with the Mideast Mess


Obama Struggles to Keep Pace with the Mideast Mess
By Massimo Calabresi Thursday, May 19, 2011

Listening to the commentary, you might think President Obama’s Thursday speech was an important moment in Middle East history. It was a “hugely important speech today” said Wolf Blitzer on CNN in the run-up; Obama to “Reset” Mideast policy declared US News.

But in coming months, Obama’s speech is more likely to look like a scramble by the White House to catch up with events in the region. Even when substance elbowed out rhetoric, Obama’s policy positions — on the Palestinian-Israeli peace process, economic support and human rights — all struggled to keep pace with challenges facing the region.

Obama’s statement that the 1967 borders should serve as the basis for a Palestinian state is significant to some observers. That language has been the basis for two-state talks since the late Clinton administration, but no President has ever said it explicitly, out of deference to Israel’s negotiating position. But unveiling tacit agreements have had minimal effect on peace in the past. In 2007, George W. Bush declared what everyone already knew: that the U.S. supported the creation of a state called Palestine. His ensuing efforts at peace ended with a new war in Gaza.

The economic aid Obama announced is sorely needed, but it will not shape the future of the region. Rather, it is a response to the past. The new U.S. aid to Egypt will amount to nearly $2 billion. Aid from international financial institutions will amount to a similar amount or slightly more. But since the uprisings in the region began in January, economies there have tanked. In Egypt, the economy is forecast to shrink by between $3.75 billion and $6.2 billion this year alone, thanks to lost tourism and other disruptions.

And on human rights, Obama’s tougher language on Syria — he said “the Syrian regime has chosen the path of murder” and touted newly announced sanctions — fell short of where his secretary of state and vice president have positioned themselves. Obama did not to say that President Bashar al Assad has lost legitimacy as a ruler.

These moves are not damaging. And it may have been better for Obama to make them than not. But the real criticism of Obama’s speech may be that each of these positions might have made a greater difference if they’d been staked out earlier.

That is particularly true of the Israeli-Palestinian fiasco. Obama spent two years focusing on a settlement freeze and resisted putting out any U.S. language on borders. Now, as Palestinians and Israelis careen toward confrontation this summer in the run-up to a Palestinian unilateral declaration of statehood in the fall, the effect of Obama’s declarations is limited at best.
Related Topics: Clinton, israel, mideast, obama, Palestine, state department, Diplomacy

Read more: http://swampland.time.com/2011/05/19/in-highly-touted-speech-obama-struggles-to-keep-pace-with-the-mideast-mess/#ixzz1MpFszaWw

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