Is Obama anti - Israel?
Just four percent of Jewish Israelis view the policies of U.S.
President Barack Obama as being pro-Israeli, according to a poll
published Friday by The Jerusalem Post, which says this is part of an
ongoing decline in support for the American leader and his latest Middle
East initiatives which are, if anything, making him less popular.
U.S. President
Barack Obama |
However, the findings of the survey may be somewhat oversimplified,
according to experts who spoke with Xinhua on Sunday. The poll,
conducted among 500 people and carrying a statistical margin of error of
4.5 percent, suggests 35 percent regard Obama as neutral, while 51
percent see him as being more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israeli.
The questionnaire, carried out for the newspaper by Smith Research,
was the third since the eve of the mid-May meeting between Obama and
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. At that point, Obama carried
a 31-percent approval rating, according to the survey.
“Of course Obama is pro-Israeli,” said Hillel Schenker, the Vice
President of Israeli Democrats Abroad.
Schenker contests that since Obama began his political career he has
repeated his commitment to the Jewish state, though he may not have made
friends on the political right when prior to last year’s presidential
election he said one does not have to be a supporter of the Likud,
Netanyahu’s party, to be a supporter of Israel.
“Being pro-Israeli means being pro-peace. That is in the greatest and
best interests of Israel,” Schenker said, questioning The Jerusalem
Post’s four-percent figure for those Israelis believing Obama to be
supportive.
Merely talking about Obama in terms of the general Jewish- Israeli
public is somewhat limited in its scope, according to Kamil Fuchs,
widely regarded as Israel’s top pollster. The professor of statistics at
Tel Aviv University argues that accurate reflection of Israeli views
comes not so much from how they see Obama, but rather from where they
are looking.
First, one needs to ascertain the views of Israelis regarding the
peace process, said Fuchs, noting that ‘The average in this case says
very little.’
Over the last three months, Obama has put tremendous pressure on the
Netanyahu government to agree to a settlement freeze. He wants to see
the immediate resumption of Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and the
Palestinians have said they will only sit at the negotiating table once
Israel ceases all construction in the West Bank.
Progress has been made in the last few weeks and both Israel and the
U.S. say agreement between them is close at hand.
The latest newspaper poll was conducted prior to Netanyahu’s meeting
in London on Wednesday with U.S. Special Envoy George Mitchell and
before the Israeli media published reports claiming that the Americans
would not push for a settlement freeze in eastern Jerusalem. While Fuchs
can understand some elements of Israeli-Jewry thinking Obama is
pro-Palestinian, he believes the Israeli view on relations with the
United States in general is that Washington’s backing is unwavering.
“Anything to do with America, the Israeli public is in favor.
Israelis are very fearful of losing U.S. support, as a result anything
American is seen as good,” said Fuchs.
“Every reference he has made and his behavior since he was elected
has been mocking and non-positive towards Israel,” said Eli Gabbai, a
former member of Israel’s Parliament with the rightist National
Religious Party.
In Gabbai’s opinion, Obama has been far friendlier with Arab and
Muslim nations since taking office than he has with Israel.
Indeed, much talk on the Israeli street when Obama spoke to the Arab
world from Cairo on June 4 was not about the content of his speech, but
more concerning the fact that Obama has visited the Muslim states
Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt without having been to Israel.
But the Obama camp argues that his engagement of the Arab and Muslim
worlds is in no way aimed at damaging Israel, but rather giving it hope
for peace with its neighbours.
The U.S. President is expected to unveil a new process for bringing
the Israelis and Palestinians back to the table and for an endgame to
this protracted conflict.
From comments made by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and others, it
appears as though Obama may make something public, around the same time
as the opening of the 64th UN General Assembly.
Xinhua |