Dissident Voice
by Ben Schreiner
The 67th session of the United Nations
General Assembly in New York is sure to be remembered for the moment Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu went Carrot Top. For in using a childish stage prop in his address to literally draw a red line for Iran, Netanyahu played the part of a buffoon. But
even as those watching were left to ponder
whether Netanyahu’s aim was to induce fear or ridicule, the prime
minister's performance still managed to fulfill three key objectives.
Firstly, Netanyahu’s cartoon gambit served to eclipse
the speech given earlier in the day by Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The charges by Abbas of Israeli “ethnic cleansing” and
a “racist” takeover of Palestine are thus sure to fall on deaf
ears. Bibi’s clowning trumps
apartheid.
Secondly, Netanyahu’s theatrics functioned to obscure the
incoherence of his entire red line campaign. For instance, in initially addressing Iran on
Thursday, Netanyahu warned that Islamic Republic is dangerously crazy. And thus, unlike with the nuclear threat posed
by the Soviet Union, containment and deterrence are not feasible policies when
it comes to Iran. As the prime minister
argued:
Deterrence worked with
the Soviets, because every time the Soviets faced a choice between their ideology
and their survival, they chose their survival.
But deterrence may not
work with the Iranians once they get nuclear weapons.
There’s a great scholar
of the Middle East, Professor Bernard Lewis, who put it best. He said that for the
Ayatollahs of Iran, mutually assured destruction is not a deterrent, it’s an
inducement.
But
soon after using the orientalist Lewis to deem
Iran an irrational actor, Netanyahu went on to demand establishing a
firm red line for Tehran because doing so would force it to halt what
the prime minister insists—without
merit—is a nefarious nuclear program.
“I believe that faced with a clear red line,”
Netanyahu argued, “Iran will back down.”
But if the Iranians are indeed irrational actors,
why would they employ any sort of cost-benefit analysis when faced with a red
line threat? If they truly don’t care
about their self-preservation, why would they be moved by any threats from
Israel or the U.S.?
Netanyahu obviously has no answers because he knows that
the Iranian government, contrary to his claims, is indeed a rational actor. After all, everyone from chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff Martin Dempsey to Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak have acknowledged as much. But with his
cartooning gimmick sure to monopolize the media’s attention, Netanyahu managed to mask—yet again—the disjointed nature of his entire red line campaign.
Thirdly, Netanyahu’s flamboyant stagecraft likely pushes the issue of Iran front and center in the U.S. presidential
election. Doubtless, each candidate will
be asked to demarcate precisely where on Netanyahu’s absurd little diagram they would
draw the red line for Iran. And for a man who has
repeatedly sought to boost the electoral chances of his old pal Romney,
any opportunity to potentially make Obama appear weak is not to be missed. In fact, one can imagine Netanyahu staring
alongside his U.N. speech prop in Republican television commercials in the near future.
Read at Dissident Voice.
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