BiBi Wins
Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2015 6:19 am
With the re-election on Netanyahu I have to wonder how much the snub by Obama helped him out.
Lol, Israel has been a nation in a box since its inception.callmeslick wrote:likely didn't hurt......it really puts Israel in a box, though, thanks to that last-minute promise of no Palestinian state.
I'd love to see it but the people who manage the status quo are not susceptible to manipulations from outside their fraternity so no one will be putting them in a box anytime soon.callmeslick wrote:I wonder how well this coalition will wear. On the other hand,I look at elections like this and wonder what US politics would be like if WE had multiple parties and had to form coalitions within and between them to govern. Not going to happen anytime soon, given how hard it is to have viable parties here past the big Two.
I wonder if it bothers you at all that Obama threatened to shoot down Israeli planes.Flabby Chick wrote:I am gutted by the results of this election, and am (as it seems the whole nation is) in complete surprise. Though i guess we shouldn't be really. Netanyahu is the master manipulator of the Israeli people, ruthlessly intelligent and a superb strategic politician. It's such a shame he uses those talents to keep himself in a job rather than deal with the internal and external issues of the day.
I think I can assume that you're asking a rhetorical question here, Z.Z.. wrote:Seriously? Are you entirely insane?
Obama hates Israel period. He views it as a white European colonial occupation of aboriginal lands by an illegitimate government. Why? Because that was what he was taught from birth by his parents, his mentors and his teachers.Z.. wrote:You seriously believe that kind of crap TB? Look dude, you don't have to like the guy or his policies, I get it, but do you truly, honestly believe that he would have authorized the shooting down of Israeli airplanes at this point in time? Seriously? Are you entirely insane?
for those reasons alone, voting the Republican idiot fringe out of Congress is a good idea. Because, those problems sure aren't Obama's fault.ThunderBunny wrote:Our allies no longer look upon us as trustworthy- and our enemies look upon us as weak. A virtual guarantee of more violence and war.
If Obama can't lead I suggest he resigns. Foreign policy has been his alone to claim and now because it is in shambles you want to blame congress. How typical.callmeslick wrote:for those reasons alone, voting the Republican idiot fringe out of Congress is a good idea. Because, those problems sure aren't Obama's fault.ThunderBunny wrote:Our allies no longer look upon us as trustworthy- and our enemies look upon us as weak. A virtual guarantee of more violence and war.
I'm going to second this because I was thinking about it just the other day. The shift in policy is subtle, but meaningful in the right places. It partly reminds me of how Ron Paul laid out his foreign policy (though Paul's views are a little extreme). One of Paul's ideas is the importance of having open communication with one's enemies because silence solves nothing. He also believes it is important to trade with everyone. So today, the United States finally has dialogue with Iran and our policy is opening up to Cuba. It's pretty amazing, actually. This can only have good consequences. As Steven Pinker noted, modern warfare is no longer cost-effective and is being avoided whenever possible. When countries have strong economic ties they become more valuable to each other and less likely to fight. Of course, that doesn't mean everyone will be buddies, but at the very least it improves the world just a little bit more. Oh, and our allies? Some of them are only friends to our dollar, but I guess that's how it has always been in international relations.callmeslick wrote:Still, his overall approach and judgment have been far sounder than any President in my lifetime.
He sounds just like some of our slimy politicians. He went hard right and then promised that side of his electorate the moon, like for instance, absolutely no Palestinian State if he gets elected, ever. But as he just spoke to NBC's reporter Andrea Mitchell here, he suddenly changed his tune. Probably to placate Washington. Every Israeli has been "pwned" by a man with delusions of grandeur, a lust for power and absolutely no principles. I'm glad Obama snubbed him.Flabby Chick wrote:I am gutted by the results of this election, and am (as it seems the whole nation is) in complete surprise. Though i guess we shouldn't be really. Netanyahu is the master manipulator of the Israeli people, ruthlessly intelligent and a superb strategic politician. It's such a shame he uses those talents to keep himself in a job rather than deal with the internal and external issues of the day.
no, we are merely(maybe) going to act in OUR self-interest, not some other nation's.Spidey wrote:So the white house does have the right to revisit deals made by previous administrations…(statment of the obvious)
So what, now we are going to “meddle” in Israel’s internal affairs using extortion.
I love watching you squirm slick. Tangential is the preoperative word now...hehcallmeslick wrote:keep tossing out those tangental smokescreens, Woody. Makes your argument look REALLY weak. One didn't even have to do with foreign policy. Frankly, the new, tougher stance with Israel is both what Israel needs to deal with to rejoin reality, and an example of why vision and I feel the way we do about Obama and foreign affairs. It is a breath of fresh air seeing a true leader that is willing to alter a deadly course for the US.
So only your preferred President has acted in the interest of the US? All the others before him were under Netanyahu's evil spell?callmeslick wrote:no, we are merely(maybe) going to act in OUR self-interest, not some other nation's.Spidey wrote:So the white house does have the right to revisit deals made by previous administrations…(statment of the obvious)
So what, now we are going to “meddle” in Israel’s internal affairs using extortion.
Obama has had the most disastrously bad foreign policy I have ever seen - dwarfing even his horrible domestic agenda by several orders of magnitude.callmeslick wrote:only the current elected President, in the past 40 years, has started to re-align how we conduct our foreign policy. That is correct, Will, yes. The previous methods, indeed many times well-intended, served the US quite badly at times, and isolated us in world opinion far too often. Neoconservatism is, rightfully, a disgraced idea which should be fled from completely. Obama has started that process, and deserves credit for doing so.
So, you have some issues. No news. I'll wait for history to judge, but am pretty confident I'm right.ThunderBunny wrote: Obama has had the most disastrously bad foreign policy I have ever seen - dwarfing even his horrible domestic agenda by several orders of magnitude.
His legacy will be failed states in Libya, Iraq, Syria and Yemen. Not to mention ham handedly resetting Russian relations to worse than the bad old days of the cold war.
Yes, we have Obama to thank for that.
I can't believe I'm replying to your idiocy, but here I go. First, I think it's cute how you keep saying Obama is the worst president you've ever seen. He's likely the only president you've ever seen. All your posts read like an angsty teenager who just discovered politics on the Internet. Everything you post is is exaggerated to truly ridiculous amounts.ThunderBunny wrote:Obama has had the most disastrously bad foreign policy I have ever seen - dwarfing even his horrible domestic agenda by several orders of magnitude.
The current events in the Middle East are the product of decades of foreign policy decision, not just by the United States, but by the UK, Russia, and other world powers of the 20th Century. President Obama's policy is only slightly different than his predecessors and most of it is on the side of rhetoric. It appears most people on this forum can't tell the difference between rhetoric, policy, and actual deeds. The actions of United States are dictated by economics. The same people are exchanging the same money as before the Obama administration.ThunderBunny wrote:His legacy will be failed states in Libya, Iraq, Syria and Yemen. Not to mention ham handedly resetting Russian relations to worse than the bad old days of the cold war.
Your confidence in no way makes most Americans feel confident. As TB points out tho, I wonder what shape America will be when the history is written.callmeslick wrote:So, you have some issues. No news. I'll wait for history to judge, but am pretty confident I'm right.ThunderBunny wrote: Obama has had the most disastrously bad foreign policy I have ever seen - dwarfing even his horrible domestic agenda by several orders of magnitude.
His legacy will be failed states in Libya, Iraq, Syria and Yemen. Not to mention ham handedly resetting Russian relations to worse than the bad old days of the cold war.
Yes, we have Obama to thank for that.