| By Aluf Benn, Haaretz Correspondent, Haaretz/Israel, Jan 21, 2010 | |||
| The Republican upset in the race for the U.S. Senate seat held for nearly half a century by liberal Edward M. Kennedy reflects a huge victory for opponents of U.S. President Barack Obama – and also for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Scott Brown defeated once-favored Martha Coakley for the Massachusetts seat even after U.S. President Barack Obama rushed to Boston on Sunday to try to save her candidacy. Over the past nine months, Netanyahu has managed to curb pressure from Obama, who enjoys a Democratic majority in both houses of Congress. Now, however, Obama will be more dependent on the support of his Republican rivals, the supporters and friends of Netanyahu. No Israeli politician matches his steps to the political goings-on in the U.S. as much as Netanyahu. He dragged out negotiations over the settlement freeze and then decided it would last for 10 months and end in September – just in time for U.S. Congressional elections in which Democrats are expected to suffer heavy losses. Netanyahu understood he must withstand the pressure until his right-wing supporters recapture a position of power on Capitol Hill and work to rein in the White House’s political activities. The election in Massachusetts, one of the most liberal states in America, will from this moment on be a burden for Obama. Proponents of the peace process will view this as a missed opportunity for Obama, who spent his first year in office on fruitless diplomatic moves that failed to restart talks between Israel and the Palestinians. From now on, it will be harder for Obama. Congressional support is essential to the political process and in the current political atmosphere in the U.S. – in which the parties are especially polarized – Netanyahu can rely on Republican support to thwart pressure on Israel. If Obama’s popularity continues to dive and the Republicans recapture at least one of the houses of Congress in November, Netanyahu and his partners will be able to breathe deep and continue expanding settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. |
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Posts Tagged ‘Scott Brown’
Obama’s lost Senate seat is a victory for Netanyahu
January 21, 2010Tags:expanding settlements, PM Benjamin Netanyahu, President Barack Obama, Scott Brown, U.S. Senate seat
Posted in Commentary, Palestine, President Barack Obama, Uncategorized, Zionist Israel | Leave a Comment »

Close Guantanamo, End Torture
January 22, 2010by mcjoan, Daily Kos, Jan 21, 2010
It’s been one year since Obama signed his executive orders outlawing torture and to close the prison at Guantanamo. Former Rep. Tom Andrews writes about how this day is being marked in D.C.
At the New York Times, one of today’s citizen/veteran-lobbyists, Matthew Alexander, assesses where we are, one year after.
The horrendous story emerging this week about the murder of three Guantanamo detainees in 2006 and the subsequent Justice Department cover-up and stonewalling–which continues in the Obama administration–only adds impetus to this effort. Unanswered torture by Americans will only fuel the flame of hatred against us, as does the constant reminder of a still-open Guanatanamo.
The stain of torture and of Guantanamo becomes more indelible by the day, and it is now no longer just Bush’s and Cheney’s. It is Obama’s and Holder’s, too. And ours. Pretending otherwise won’t make it go away. It will just set it more firmly.
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Tags:murder of three Guantanamo detainees, Obama's order to close Guantanamo, Scott Brown, torturing the detainees
Posted in Commentary, Human rights, torture, Uncategorized, US policy, USA | Leave a Comment »