Friday, March 13, 2009

Bashar al-Assad is having the best week ever

"...It seems like everyone is intent on wooing Damascus. Everyone, that is, except Israel. Turns out the incoming Israeli government led by Benjamin Netanyahu isn't so hot on the Syria track:

Benjamin Netanyahu will likely shelve recently revived Israeli peace talks with Syria given its territorial demands and alliance with Iran, a senior adviser to Israel's prime minister-designate said on Thursday. Uzi Arad helped Netanyahu when he was premier in 1996-1999 to craft indirect contacts with Damascus and is widely considered to be his choice for national security adviser.

He suggested Israel's new regional priorities may make negotiating with the Palestinians a more viable prospect than Syrian talks.

I'm going to have to throw the BS flag here. More likely, the very fact that the Syria track is becoming increasingly viable is what makes Netanyahu and other Israeli hardliners nervous -- they don't want a deal because they simply don't want to give up the Golan Heights. They're ideologues, but they're not naive: There's no way they think the Palestinian track is going anywhere right now.

You can tell that Arad is being disingenuous from this bit of flim-flammery:

Western interest in advancing Israeli-Arab peace could best be served by curbing Iran's nuclear programme, he argued.

Israel, which is assumed to have the Middle East's only atomic arsenal, has endorsed U.S.-led efforts to use sanctions to get Tehran to abandon uranium enrichment, a process that can produce bombs though the Iranians deny having any such intent. "The more Iran becomes strong, the closer it gets to nuclear weapons, the more terrified the moderates in the Arab world and the Palestinian people become, and the more emboldened the radicals and the extremists are," Arad said. "So whichever way you look at it the order of priority is: blunt Iran first, move vigorously on peace after, and based on that. Should you act in the wrong order...you will have a sterile, perhaps failed process with the Palestinians and at the same time you will end up with a nuclear Iran."

Remember when the argument was that Saddam had to go before any progress could be made on Israeli-Palestinian peace? How's that working out?

The bottom line: It's a real shame that just as the United States is finally putting together a smart diplomatic strategy for the region, its supposed best friend is gearing up to ensure that America fails."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I certainly believe that the personality of the Syrian president has quite a bit of influence on the peace process in the Middle East. His personality reflects on the image he projects to the world. Regardless of the defenses he surrounds himself with, every now and then a glimpse of the real Assad is revealed.
Feel free to visit my blog on the psychology of Al Assad at the following link:
http://psychologyofalassad.blogspot.com/
E.L.