7 thoughts on “Lieberman: ‘If Everyone is Worried About Iran, Everyone Forgets Palestinians’ – Tikun Olam תיקון עולם إصلاح العالم
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  1. everybody in the Muslim and Arab world, and first and foremost in the Gulf states, are worried about the Iranian problem,’ he said.

    I don’t believe that for a single moment. The guy is lying.

    1. Yes, I found it interesting that he boasted about all the Arab foreign ministers he met. Which ones might actually be willing to meet with him?? I doubt any. Someone should’ve asked him to enumerate the specific ones he met with.

    2. I don’t believe that for a single moment. The guy is lying.

      Me neither. What polling and the like that is usually done in the Arab World shows that they almost always view Israel as the prime threat.

  2. ‘So a people who saw its own children perish in the Holocaust will now eagerly bring similar privation on Iran’s young’

    Richard, really, this is a bit much. Firstly, because Netanyahu doesn’t, and in fact can’t, speak for the Jewish people (and he definitely doesn’t represent me!).
    Secondly because it’s not like there’s a slippery slope, or a gray line between
    a) the deliberate, industrial scale, ideologically-charged attempt at the annihilation of a people
    b) sanctions imposed by the international community.

    the two are conceptually and factually distinct.

    Your arguments are set in an idealised world where
    i)Israel could be stripped of its nuclear capabilities, or
    ii)the US doesn’t prefer having a democratic client state in a region vital to its strategic interests. [I don’t entirely buy the ‘we share values’ argument to explain the US-Israel relationship, and the “Israel lobby rules the world’ argument doesn’t quite cut it for me either].

    Your post still leaves questions to be answered. Firstly,if sanctions were ineffective in the case of Iraq, then why is it inevitable that identical mistakes will be made now? Because omniscient Roger Cohen says so?
    Secondly, is there any possibility that sanctions are not part of some conspiracy to bomb Iran (which is definitely not in the US interest), or is this simply an objective fact that Obama is unaware of?
    Finally, if sanctions are intrinsically ineffective, what do you suggest should be done? Should Iran be allowed, or passively encouraged, to flout its obligations under the Nuclear non-proliferation treaty? And what kind of standard does that set for the future?

    1. Netanyahu doesn’t, and in fact can’t, speak for the Jewish people (and he definitely doesn’t represent me!).

      We can argue about whether in truth Bibi speaks for or represents the Jewish people. You & I both say no. But he says otherwise. In fact, in his Charlie Rose interview he made precisely this claim. The problem is that too many Jews and non-Jews accept this claim w/o examining the implications of it.

      if sanctions are intrinsically ineffective, what do you suggest should be done?

      Read Cohen’s article if you haven’t. He suggests a broad negotiation bringing in all the major issues that divide & unite the parties thus giving Iran some reason to believe it will gain something by participating.

      As for Iran’s relationship to NPT, can we both agree that it’s extremely ironic that Israel should be so concerned about Iran flouting NPT when it isn’t even a signatory. I’d feel a whole lot better about getting tough on Iran if there was some consistency in the process. If Israel joined NPT & abided by its inspection protocols, I’d be much happier demanding full compliance by Iran. All that being said, I’m very concerned about Iran developing nuclear weapons & want Obama to do all he can to resolve this issue short of that happening. But am I prepared in the final analysis for a major military confrontation that might delay Iran’s getting the bomb by a yr or 3? No.

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