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3 March, 2014
Ar,,,,,, i Bloomberg
Obama to Israel — Time Is Running Out
Jeffrey Goldberg
The Washington Post
Putin's error in Ukraine is the kind that leads to
catastro i he
David Ignatius
Zocalo Public Square (Arizona State University)
Why Obama Shouldn't Fall for Putin's
Ukrainian Folly
Anatol Lieven
The Washington Post
President Obama's foreign policy is based on
fantasy
Editorial Board
Antcic 5.
Asharq Al Awsat
Turkey's local elections are an important
barometer
Samir Salim
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Al Jazeera
Is AIPAC (loomed?
Philip Giraldi
Bloomberg
Obama to Israel -- Time Is Running
Out
Jeffrey Goldberg
Mar 2, 2014 -- When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu visits the White House tomorrow, President Barack
Obama will tell him that his country could face a bleak future --
one of international isolation and demographic disaster -- if he
refuses to endorse a U.S.-drafted framework agreement for peace
with the Palestinians. Obama will warn Netanyahu that time is
running out for Israel as a Jewish-majority democracy. And the
president will make the case that Netanyahu, alone among
Israelis, has the strength and political credibility to lead his
people away from the precipice. In an hourlong interview
Thursday in the Oval Office, Obama, borrowing from the Jewish
sage Rabbi Hillel, told me that his message to Netanyahu will be
this: "If not now, when? And if not you, Mr. Prime Minister,
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then who?" He then took a sharper tone, saying that if
Netanyahu "does not believe that a peace deal with the
Palestinians is the right thing to do for Israel, then he needs to
articulate an alternative approach." He added, "It's hard to come
up with one that's plausible." Unlike Netanyahu, Obama will
not address the annual convention of the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee, a pro-Israel lobbying group, this week -- the
administration is upset with Aipac for, in its view, trying to
subvert American-led nuclear negotiations with Iran. In our
interview, the president, while broadly supportive of Israel and a
close U.S.-Israel relationship, made statements that would be
met at an Aipac convention with cold silence. Obama was
blunter about Israel's future than I've ever heard him. His
language was striking, but of a piece with observations made in
recent months by his secretary of state, John Kerry, who until
this interview, had taken the lead in pressuring both Netanyahu
and the Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, to agree to a
framework deal. Obama made it clear that he views Abbas as the
most politically moderate leader the Palestinians may ever have.
It seemed obvious to me that the president believes that the next
move is Netanyahu's. "There comes a point where you can't
manage this anymore, and then you start having to make very
difficult choices," Obama said. "Do you resign yourself to what
amounts to a permanent occupation of the West Bank? Is that
the character of Israel as a state for a long period of time? Do
you perpetuate, over the course of a decade or two decades,
more and more restrictive policies in terms of Palestinian
movement? Do you place restrictions on Arab-Israelis in ways
that run counter to Israel's traditions?" During the interview,
which took place a day before the Russian military incursion
into Ukraine, Obama argued that American adversaries, such as
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Iran, Syria and Russia itself, still believe that he is capable of
using force to advance American interests, despite his reluctance
to strike Syria last year after President Bashar al-Assad crossed
Obama's chemical-weapons red line. "We've now seen 15 to 20
percent of those chemical weapons on their way out of Syria
with a very concrete schedule to get rid of the rest," Obama told
me. "That would not have happened had the Iranians said,
`Obama's bluffing, he's not actually really willing to take a
strike.' If the Russians had said, Thh, don't worry about it, all
those submarines that are floating around your coastline, that's
all just for show.' Of course they took it seriously! That's why
they engaged in the policy they did." I returned to this
particularly sensitive subject. "Just to be clear," I asked, "You
don't believe the Iranian leadership now thinks that your `all
options are on the table' threat as it relates to their nuclear
program -- you don't think that they have stopped taking that
seriously?" Obama answered: "I know they take it seriously."
How do you know? I asked. "We have a high degree of
confidence that when they look at 35,000 U.S. military
personnel in the region that are engaged in constant training
exercises under the direction of a president who already has
shown himself willing to take military action in the past, that
they should take my statements seriously," he replied. "And the
American people should as well, and the Israelis should as well,
and the Saudis should as well." I asked the president if, in
retrospect, he should have provided more help to Syria's rebels
earlier in their struggle. "I think those who believe that two
years ago, or three years ago, there was some swift resolution to
this thing had we acted more forcefully, fundamentally
misunderstand the nature of the conflict in Syria and the
conditions on the ground there," Obama said. "When you have a
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professional army that is well-armed and sponsored by two large
states who have huge stakes in this, and they are fighting against
a fanner, a carpenter, an engineer who started out as protesters
and suddenly now see themselves in the midst of a civil conflict --
the notion that we could have, in a clean way that didn't commit
U.S. military forces, changed the equation on the ground there
was never true." He portrayed his reluctance to involve the
U.S. in the Syrian civil war as a direct consequence of what he
sees as America's overly militarized engagement in the Muslim
world: "There was the possibility that we would have made the
situation worse rather than better on the ground, precisely
because of U.S. involvement, which would have meant that we
would have had the third, or, if you count Libya, the fourth war
in a Muslim country in the span of a decade." Obama was
adamant that he was correct to fight a congressional effort to
impose more time-delayed sanctions on Iran just as nuclear
negotiations were commencing: "There's never been a
negotiation in which at some point there isn't some pause, some
mechanism to indicate possible good faith," he said. "Even in
the old Westerns or gangster movies, right, everyone puts their
gun down just for a second. You sit down, you have a
conversation; if the conversation doesn't go well, you leave the
room and everybody knows what's going to happen and
everybody gets ready. But you don't start shooting in the middle
of the room during the course of negotiations." He said he
remains committed to keeping Iran from obtaining nuclear
weapons and seemed unworried by reports that Iran's economy
is improving. On the subject of Middle East peace, Obama told
me that the U.S.'s friendship with Israel is undying, but he also
issued what I took to be a veiled threat: The U.S., though willing
to defend an isolated Israel at the United Nations and in other
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international bodies, might soon be unable to do so effectively.
"If you see no peace deal and continued aggressive settlement
construction -- and we have seen more aggressive settlement
construction over the last couple years than we've seen in a very
long time," Obama said. "If Palestinians come to believe that the
possibility of a contiguous sovereign Palestinian state is no
longer within reach, then our ability to manage the international
fallout is going to be limited." We also spent a good deal of time
talking about the unease the U.S.'s Sunni Arab allies feel about
his approach to Iran, their traditional adversary. I asked the
president, "What is more dangerous: Sunni extremism or Shia
extremism?" I found his answer revelatory. He did not address
the issue of Sunni extremism. Instead he argued in essence that
the Shiite Iranian regime is susceptible to logic, appeals to self-
interest and incentives. "I'm not big on extremism generally,"
Obama said. "I don't think you'll get me to choose on those two
issues. What I'll say is that if you look at Iranian behavior, they
are strategic, and they're not impulsive. They have a worldview,
and they see their interests, and they respond to costs and
benefits. And that isn't to say that they aren't a theocracy that
embraces all kinds of ideas that I find abhorrent, but they're not
North Korea. They are a large, powerful country that sees itself
as an important player on the world stage, and I do not think has
a suicide wish, and can respond to incentives." This view puts
him at odds with Netanyahu's understanding of Iran. In an
interview after he won the premiership, the Israeli leader
described the Iranian leadership to me as "a messianic
apocalyptic cult." I asked Obama if he understood why his
policies make the leaders of Saudi Arabia and other Arab
countries nervous: "I think that there are shifts that are taking
place in the region that have caught a lot of them off guard," he
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said. "I think change is always scary."
Below is a complete transcript of our conversation. I've
condensed my questions. The president's answers are
reproduced in full.
JEFFREY GOLDBERG: You've been mostly silent on the
subject of the Middle East peace process for months if not more.
And the silence has been filled by speculation: You're not
interested, you're pessimistic, you felt burnt the last time
around. What accounts for the silence, and where do you think
this is headed?
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: The silence on my part is a
direct result of my secretary of state, John Kerry, engaging in
some of the most vigorous, active diplomacy that we've seen on
this issue in many years. And John is not doing that by accident.
He's doing it because as an administration we think that it is in
the interest of the Israelis and the Palestinians, but also in the
interest of the United States and the world to arrive at a
framework for negotiations that can actually bring about a two-
state solution that provides Israel the security it needs -- peace
with its neighbors -- at a time when the neighborhood has gotten
more volatile, and gives Palestinians the dignity of a state.
I think John has done an extraordinary job, but these are really
difficult negotiations. I am very appreciative that Prime Minister
Netanyahu and President Abbas have taken them very seriously.
There have been very intense, detailed and difficult
conversations on both sides.
GOLDBERG: And you're keeping up to date on all of this?
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OBAMA: Absolutely. John reports to me almost weekly about
progress and occasionally asks for direction. It doesn't serve
anybody's purposes for me to be popping off in the press about
it. In fact, part of what both the Israelis and the Palestinians and
us agreed to at the beginning of these negotiations was that we
wouldn't be characterizing them publicly until we were able to
report on success or until the negotiations actually broke down.
We are coming to a point, though, over the next couple of
months where the parties are going to have to make some
decisions about how they move forward. And my hope and
expectation is, despite the incredible political challenges, that
both Prime Minister Netanyahu and Abbas are able to reach past
their differences and arrive at a framework that can move us to
peace.
GOLDBERG: Let me read you something that John Kerry told
the American Jewish Committee not long ago: "We're running
out of time. We're running out of possibilities. And let's be
clear: If we do not succeed now -- and I know I'm raising those
stakes -- but if we do not succeed now, we may not get another
chance." He has also suggested strongly that there might be a
third intifada down the road and that if this peace process
doesn't work, Israel itself could be facing international isolation
and boycott. Do you agree with this assessment? Is this the last
chance?
OBAMA: Well, look, I'm a congenital optimist. And,
obviously, this is a conflict that has gone on for decades. And
humanity has a way of muddling through, even in difficult
circumstances. So you never know how things play themselves
out.
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But John Kerry, somebody who has been a fierce advocate and
defender on behalf of Israel for decades now, I think he has been
simply stating what observers inside of Israel and outside of
Israel recognize, which is that with each successive year, the
window is closing for a peace deal that both the Israelis can
accept and the Palestinians can accept -- in part because of
changes in demographics; in part because of what's been
happening with settlements; in part because Abbas is getting
older, and I think nobody would dispute that whatever
disagreements you may have with him, he has proven himself to
be somebody who has been committed to nonviolence and
diplomatic efforts to resolve this issue. We do not know what a
successor to Abbas will look like.
GOLDBERG: Do you believe he's the most moderate person
you're going to find?
OBAMA: I believe that President Abbas is sincere about his
willingness to recognize Israel and its right to exist, to recognize
Israel's legitimate security needs, to shun violence, to resolve
these issues in a diplomatic fashion that meets the concerns of
the people of Israel. And I think that this is a rare quality not just
within the Palestinian territories, but in the Middle East
generally. For us not to seize that opportunity would be a
mistake. And I think John is referring to that fact.
We don't know exactly what would happen. What we know is
that it gets harder by the day. What we also know is that Israel
has become more isolated internationally. We had to stand up in
the Security Council in ways that 20 years ago would have
involved far more European support, far more support from
other parts of the world when it comes to Israel's position. And
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that's a reflection of a genuine sense on the part of a lot of
countries out there that this issue continues to fester, is not
getting resolved, and that nobody is willing to take the leap to
bring it to closure.
In that kind of environment, where you've got a partner on the
other side who is prepared to negotiate seriously, who does not
engage in some of the wild rhetoric that so often you see in the
Arab world when it comes to Israel, who has shown himself
committed to maintaining order within the West Bank and the
Palestinian Authority and to cooperate with Israelis around their
security concerns -- for us to not seize this moment I think
would be a great mistake. I've said directly to Prime Minister
Netanyahu he has an opportunity to solidify, to lock in, a
democratic, Jewish state of Israel that is at peace with its
neighbors and --
GOLDBERG: With permanent borders?
OBAMA: With permanent borders. And has an opportunity also
to take advantage of a potential realignment of interests in the
region, as many of the Arab countries see a common threat in
Iran. The only reason that that potential realignment is not, and
potential cooperation is not, more explicit is because of the
Palestinian issue.
GOLDBERG: I want to come to Iran in a moment, but two
questions about two leaders you're going to be dealing with
pretty intensively. Abu Mazen [Abbas] -- all these things you
say are true, but he is also the leader of a weak, corrupt and
divided Palestinian entity that is already structurally semi-
powerless. Do you think he could deliver anything more than a
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framework agreement? Is this the guy who can lead the
Palestinian people to say, "OK, no more claims against Israel,
permanent peace, permanent recognition?"
OBAMA: Look, I think it has to be tested. The question is:
What is lost by testing it? If in fact a framework for negotiations
is arrived at, the core principles around which the negotiations
are going to proceed is arrived at, I have no doubt that there are
going to be factions within the Palestinian community that will
vigorously object in the same way that there are going to be
those within Israel who are going to vigorously object.
But here's what I know from my visits to the region: That for all
that we've seen over the last several decades, all the mistrust
that's been built up, the Palestinians would still prefer peace.
They would still prefer a country of their own that allows them
to find a job, send their kids to school, travel overseas, go back
and forth to work without feeling as if they are restricted or
constrained as a people. And they recognize that Israel is not
going anywhere. So I actually think that the voices for peace
within the Palestinian community will be stronger with a
framework agreement and that Abu Mazen's position will be
strengthened with a framework for negotiations.
There would still be huge questions about what happens in
Gaza, but I actually think Hamas would be greatly damaged by
the prospect of real peace. And the key question, the legitimate
question for Israel, would be making sure that their core security
needs are still met as a framework for negotiations led to an
actual peace deal.
And part of what John Kerry has done has been to dig into
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Israel's security needs with the help of General John Allen, the
former commander in Afghanistan. And they have developed,
based on conversations with the Israeli Defense Forces about
their defense needs, they've come up with a plan for how you
would deal with the Jordan Valley, how you would deal with
potential threats to Israel that are unprecedented in detail,
unprecedented in scope. And as long as those security needs
were met, then testing Abbas ends up being the right thing to do.
GOLDBERG: My impression watching your relationship with
Netanyahu over the years is that you admire his intelligence and
you admire his political skill, but you also get frustrated by an
inability or unwillingness on his part to spend political capital --
in terms of risking coalition partnerships -- in order to embrace
what he says he accepts, a two-state solution. Is that a fair
statement? When he comes to Washington, how hard are you
going to push him out of his comfort zone?
OBAMA: What is absolutely true is Prime Minister Netanyahu
is smart. He is tough. He is a great communicator. He is
obviously a very skilled politician. And I take him at his word
when he says that he sees the necessity of resolving the Israeli-
Palestinian conflict. I think he genuinely believes that.
I also think that politics in Israel around this issue are very
difficult. You have the chaos that's been swirling around the
Middle East. People look at what's happening in Syria. They
look at what's happening in Lebanon. Obviously, they look at
what's happening in Gaza. And understandably a lot of people
ask themselves, "Can we afford to have potential chaos at our
borders, so close to our cities?" So he is dealing with all of that,
and I get that.
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What I've said to him privately is the same thing that I say
publicly, which is the situation will not improve or resolve itself.
This is not a situation where you wait and the problem goes
away. There are going to be more Palestinians, not fewer
Palestinians, as time goes on. There are going to be more Arab-
Israelis, not fewer Arab-Israelis, as time goes on.
And for Bibi to seize the moment in a way that perhaps only he
can, precisely because of the political tradition that he comes out
of and the credibility he has with the right inside of Israel, for
him to seize this moment is perhaps the greatest gift he could
give to future generations of Israelis. But it's hard. And as
somebody who occupies a fairly tough job himself, I'm always
sympathetic to somebody else's politics.
I have not yet heard, however, a persuasive vision of how Israel
survives as a democracy and a Jewish state at peace with its
neighbors in the absence of a peace deal with the Palestinians
and a two-state solution. Nobody has presented me a credible
scenario.
The only thing that I've heard is, "We'll just keep on doing what
we're doing, and deal with problems as they arise. And we'll
build settlements where we can. And where there are problems
in the West Bank, we will deal with them forcefully. We'll
cooperate or co-opt the Palestinian Authority." And yet, at no
point do you ever see an actual resolution to the problem.
GOLDBERG: So, maintenance of a chronic situation?
OBAMA: It's maintenance of a chronic situation. And my
assessment, which is shared by a number of Israeli observers, I
think, is there comes a point where you can't manage this
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anymore, and then you start having to make very difficult
choices. Do you resign yourself to what amounts to a permanent
occupation of the West Bank? Is that the character of Israel as a
state for a long period of time? Do you perpetuate, over the
course of a decade or two decades, more and more restrictive
policies in terms of Palestinian movement? Do you place
restrictions on Arab-Israelis in ways that run counter to Israel's
traditions?
GOLDBERG: You sound worried.
OBAMA: Well, I am being honest that nobody has provided me
with a clear picture of how this works in the absence of a peace
deal. If that's the case -- one of the things my mom always used
to tell me and I didn't always observe, but as I get older I agree
with -- is if there's something you know you have to do, even if
it's difficult or unpleasant, you might as well just go ahead and
do it, because waiting isn't going to help. When I have a
conversation with Bibi, that's the essence of my conversation: If
not now, when? And if not you, Mr. Prime Minister, then who?
How does this get resolved?
This is not an issue in which we are naive about the challenges. I
deal every day with very difficult choices about U.S. security.
As restrained, and I think thoughtful, as our foreign policy has
been, I'm still subject to constant criticism about our
counterterrorism policies, and our actions in Libya, and our lack
of military action in Syria.
And so if I'm thinking about the prime minister of Israel, I'm
not somebody who believes that it's just a matter of changing
your mind and suddenly everything goes smoothly. But I believe
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that Bibi is strong enough that if he decided this was the right
thing to do for Israel, that he could do it. If he does not believe
that a peace deal with the Palestinians is the right thing to do for
Israel, then he needs to articulate an alternative approach. And
as I said before, it's hard to come up with one that's plausible.
GOLDBERG: You told me in an interview six years ago, when
you were running for president, you said, "My job in being a
friend to Israel is partly to hold up a mirror and tell the truth and
say if Israel is building settlements without any regard to the
effects that this has on the peace process, then we're going to be
stuck in the same status quo that we've been stuck in for decades
now." That was six years ago. It's been the official position of
the United States for decades that settlements are illegitimate.
OBAMA: Right.
GOLDBERG: If this process fails, do you see this becoming
more than the rhetorical position of the United States? Whether
that has impact on the way you deal with the United Nations
questions, an impact on the aid that the U.S. provides Israel?
OBAMA: Here's what I would say: The U.S. commitment to
Israel's security is not subject to periodic policy differences.
That's a rock-solid commitment, and it's one that I've upheld
proudly throughout my tenure. I think the affection that
Americans feel for Israel, the bond that our people feel and the
bipartisan support that people have for Israel is not going to be
affected.
So it is not realistic nor is it my desire or expectation that the
core commitments we have with Israel change during the
remainder of my administration or the next administration. But
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what I do believe is that if you see no peace deal and continued
aggressive settlement construction -- and we have seen more
aggressive settlement construction over the last couple years
than we've seen in a very long time -- if Palestinians come to
believe that the possibility of a contiguous sovereign Palestinian
state is no longer within reach, then our ability to manage the
international fallout is going to be limited.
GOLDBERG: Willingness, or ability?
OBAMA: Not necessarily willingness, but ability to manage
international fallout is going to be limited. And that has
consequences.
Look, sometimes people are dismissive of multilateral
institutions and the United Nations and the EU [European
Union] and the high commissioner of such and such. And
sometimes there's good reason to be dismissive. There's a lot of
hot air and rhetoric and posturing that may not always mean
much. But in today's world, where power is much more diffuse,
where the threats that any state or peoples face can come from
non-state actors and asymmetrical threats, and where
international cooperation is needed in order to deal with those
threats, the absence of international goodwill makes you less
safe. The condemnation of the international community can
translate into a lack of cooperation when it comes to key security
interests. It means reduced influence for us, the United States, in
issues that are of interest to Israel. It's survivable, but it is not
preferable.
GOLDBERG: Let's go to Iran. Two years ago, you told me in
an interview that, "I think both the Iranian and the Israeli
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governments recognize that when the United States says it is
unacceptable for Iran to have a nuclear weapon, we mean what
we say." You know, I don't have to tell you, that many of your
Arab and Israeli friends are worried, post-Syria -- the incident in
which you drew a red line and there was no military
enforcement of it -- they're worried about your willingness to
use force under any circumstance. But put them aside for a
second. How do you think the Iranian regime saw your
reluctance to use force against [Bashar al-]Assad? And does this
have any impact on the way they're dealing with the current
nuclear negotiations? It's a linkage argument.
OBAMA: Let's be very clear about what happened. I threatened
kinetic strikes on Syria unless they got rid of their chemical
weapons. When I made that threat, Syria denied even having
chemical weapons. In the span of 10 days to two weeks, you had
their patrons, the Iranians and the Russians, force or persuade
Assad to come clean on his chemical weapons, inventory them
for the international community, and commit to a timeline to get
rid of them.
And the process has moved more slowly than we would like, but
it has actually moved, and we've now seen 15 to 20 percent of
those chemical weapons on their way out of Syria with a very
concrete schedule to get rid of the rest. That would not have
happened had the Iranians said, "Obama's bluffing, he's not
actually really willing to take a strike." If the Russians had said,
"Ehh, don't worry about it, all those submarines that are floating
around your coastline, that's all just for show." Of course they
took it seriously! That's why they engaged in the policy they
did.
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Now, the truth is, some of our commentators or friends in the
region, their complaint is not that somehow we indicated an
unwillingness to use military force in the region -- their
complaint is that I did not choose to go ahead, even if we could
get a deal on chemical weapons, to hit them anyway as a means
of getting rid of Assad, in what has increasingly become a proxy
war inside of Syria.
GOLDBERG: So just to be clear: You don't believe the Iranian
leadership now thinks that your "all options are on the table"
threat as it relates to their nuclear program -- you don't think
that they have stopped taking that seriously?
OBAMA: I know they take it seriously.
GOLDBERG: How do you know they take it seriously?
OBAMA: We have a high degree of confidence that when they
look at 35,000 U.S. military personnel in the region that are
engaged in constant training exercises under the direction of a
president who already has shown himself willing to take military
action in the past, that they should take my statements seriously.
And the American people should as well, and the Israelis should
as well, and the Saudis should as well.
Now, that does not mean that that is my preferred course of
action. So let's just be very clear here. There are always
consequences to military action that are unpredictable and can
spin out of control, and even if perfectly executed carry great
costs. So if we can resolve this issue diplomatically, we
absolutely should.
And the fact that in painstaking fashion, over the course of
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several years, we were able to enforce an unprecedented
sanctions regime that so crippled the Iranian economy that they
were willing to come to the table and, in fact, helped to shape
the Iranian election, and that they are now in a joint plan of
action that for the first time in a decade halts their nuclear
program -- no centrifuges being installed; the 20 percent
enriched uranium being drawn down to zero; Arak on hold;
international inspectors buzzing around in ways that are
unimaginable even a year ago -- what that all indicates is that
there is the opportunity, there is the chance for us to resolve this
without resorting to military force.
And if we have any chance to make sure that Iran does not have
nuclear weapons, if we have any chance to render their breakout
capacity nonexistent, or so minimal that we can handle it, then
we've got to pursue that path. And that has been my argument
with Prime Minister Netanyahu; that has been my argument with
members of Congress who have been interested in imposing new
sanctions. My simple point has been, we lose nothing by testing
this out.
GOLDBERG: You said something to David Remnick a few
weeks ago that really struck me: "If we were able to get Iran to
operate in a responsible fashion -- not funding terrorist
organizations, not trying to stir up sectarian discontent in other
countries, and not developing a nuclear weapon -- you could see
an equilibrium developing between Sunni, or predominantly
Sunni, Gulf states and Iran in which there's competition,
perhaps suspicion, but not an active or proxy warfare."
I think I understand what you mean, but in the Gulf -- and this
goes to the question of why our allies are uneasy -- in the Gulf
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you have a king of Saudi Arabia who has been asking for years
for you to "cut the head off the snake," referring to Iran. They're
hearing this -- they're reading this and hearing you say, "live
with the snake." Do you understand why they're uneasy about
your approach, or your broader philosophical approach, or are
they overinterpreting this opening to Iran?
OBAMA: Here's what I understand. For years now, Iran has
been an irresponsible international actor. They've sponsored
terrorism. They have threatened their neighbors. They have
financed actions that have killed people in neighboring states.
And Iran has also exploited or fanned sectarian divisions in
other countries. In light of that record, it's completely
understandable for other countries to be not only hostile towards
Iran but also doubtful about the possibilities of Iran changing. I
get that. But societies do change -- I think there is a difference
between an active hostility and sponsoring of terrorism and
mischief, and a country that you're in competition with and you
don't like but it's not blowing up homes in your country or
trying to overthrow your government.
GOLDBERG: And you feel there's a real opportunity to
achieve a genuine breakthrough?
OBAMA: Here's my view. Set aside Iranian motives. Let's
assume that Iran is not going to change. It's a theocracy. It's anti-
Semitic. It is anti-Sunni. And the new leaders are just for show.
Let's assume all that. If we can ensure that they don't have
nuclear weapons, then we have at least prevented them from
bullying their neighbors, or heaven forbid, using those weapons,
and the other misbehavior they're engaging in is manageable.
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If, on the other hand, they are capable of changing; if, in fact, as
a consequence of a deal on their nuclear program those voices
and trends inside of Iran are strengthened, and their economy
becomes more integrated into the international community, and
there's more travel and greater openness, even if that takes a
decade or 15 years or 20 years, then that's very much an
outcome we should desire.
So again, there's a parallel to the Middle East discussion we
were having earlier. The only reason you would not want us to
test whether or not we can resolve this nuclear program issue
diplomatically would be if you thought that by a quick military
exercise you could remove the threat entirely. And since I'm the
commander in chief of the most powerful military on earth, I
think I have pretty good judgment as to whether or not this
problem can be best solved militarily. And what I'm saying is
it's a lot better if we solve it diplomatically.
GOLDBERG: So why are the Sunnis so nervous about you?
OBAMA: Well, I don't think this is personal. I think that there
are shifts that are taking place in the region that have caught a
lot of them off guard. I think change is always scary. I think
there was a comfort with a United States that was comfortable
with an existing order and the existing alignments, and was an
implacable foe of Iran, even if most of that was rhetorical and
didn't actually translate into stopping the nuclear program. But
the rhetoric was good.
What I've been saying to our partners in the region is, "We've
got to respond and adapt to change." And the bottom line is:
What's the best way for us actually to make sure Iran doesn't
have a nuclear weapon?
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GOLDBERG: What is more dangerous: Sunni extremism or
Shia extremism?
OBAMA: I'm not big on extremism generally. I don't think
you'll get me to choose on those two issues. What I'll say is that
if you look at Iranian behavior, they are strategic, and they're
not impulsive. They have a worldview, and they see their
interests, and they respond to costs and benefits. And that isn't
to say that they aren't a theocracy that embraces all kinds of
ideas that I find abhorrent, but they're not North Korea. They
are a large, powerful country that sees itself as an important
player on the world stage, and I do not think has a suicide wish,
and can respond to incentives. And that's the reason why they
came to the table on sanctions.
So just to finish up, the most important thing that I have said to
Bibi and members of Congress on this whole issue is that it is
profoundly in all of our interests to let this process play itself
out. Let us test whether or not Iran can move far enough to give
us assurances that their program is peaceful and that they do not
have breakout capacity.
If, in fact, they can't get there, the worst that will have happened
is that we will have frozen their program for a six-month period.
We'll have much greater insight into their program. All the
architecture of our sanctions will have still been enforced, in
place. Their economy might have modestly improved during this
six-month to one-year period. But I promise you that all we have
to do is turn the dial back on and suddenly --
GOLDBERG: You think that will be easy to turn on?
OBAMA: Well, partly because 95 percent of it never got turned
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off. And we will be in a stronger position to say to our partners,
including the Russians, the Chinese and others, who have thus
far stuck with us on sanctions, that it is Iran that walked away; it
wasn't the U.S., it wasn't Congress, it wasn't our new sanctions
that jettisoned the deal. And we will then have the diplomatic
high ground to tighten the screws even further. If, on the other
hand, it is perceived that we were not serious about negotiations,
then that ironically is the quickest path to sanctions unraveling,
if in fact Iran is insincere.
GOLDBERG: One more question on Iran: If sanctions got
them to the table, why wouldn't more sanctions keep them at the
table?
OBAMA: The logic of sanctions was to get them to negotiate.
The logic of the joint action plan is to freeze the situation for a
certain period of time to allow the negotiators to work. The
notion that in the midst of negotiations we would then improve
our position by saying, "We're going to squeeze you even
harder," ignores the fact that [President Hassan] Rouhani and
the negotiators in Iran have their own politics. They've got to
respond to their own hardliners. And there are a whole bunch of
folks inside of Iran who are just as suspicious of our motives
and willingness to ultimately lift sanctions as we are suspicious
of their unwillingness to get rid of their nuclear program.
There's never been a negotiation in which at some point there
isn't some pause, some mechanism to indicate possible good
faith. Even in the old Westerns or gangster movies, right,
everyone puts their gun down just for a second. You sit down,
you have a conversation; if the conversation doesn't go well,
you leave the room and everybody knows what's going to
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happen and everybody gets ready. But you don't start shooting
in the middle of the room during the course of negotiations.
So the logic of new sanctions right now would only make sense
if, in fact, we had a schedule of dismantling the existing
sanctions. And we've kept 95 percent of them in place. Iran is
going to be, net, losing more money with the continuing
enforcement of oil sanctions during the course of this joint plan
of action than they're getting from the modest amount of money
we gave them access to.
And, by the way, even though they're talking to European
businesses, oil companies have been contacting Iran and going
into Iran, nobody has been making any deals because they know
that our sanctions are still in place. They may want to reserve
their first place in line if, in fact, a deal is struck and sanctions
are removed. That's just prudent business.
But we've sent a very clear message to them and, by the way, to
all of our partners and the 135 + 1 [the five permanent members
of the UN Security Council plus Germany], that they better tell
their companies that their sanctions are still in force, including
U.S. unilateral sanctions. And we're going to enforce them, and
we've been enforcing them during the course of these
discussions so far.
GOLDBERG: I was reading your Nobel Peace Prize
acceptance speech last night, and I wanted to quote one thing
you said: "I believe that force can be justified on humanitarian
grounds, as it was in the Balkans, or in other places that have
been scarred by war. Inaction tears at our conscience and can
lead to more costly intervention later."
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I was really struck by that last sentence. I'm wondering at what
point in Syria does it become too much to bear? I'm not talking
about the bifurcated argument, boots on the ground or nothing,
but what does Assad have to do to provoke an American-led
military response? Another way of asking this is: If you could
roll back the clock three years, could you have done more to
build up the more-moderate opposition groups?
OBAMA: I think those who believe that two years ago, or three
years ago, there was some swift resolution to this thing had we
acted more forcefully, fundamentally misunderstand the nature
of the conflict in Syria and the conditions on the ground there.
When you have a professional army that is well-armed and
sponsored by two large states who have huge stakes in this, and
they are fighting against a farmer, a carpenter, an engineer who
started out as protesters and suddenly now see themselves in the
midst of a civil conflict -- the notion that we could have, in a
clean way that didn't commit U.S. military forces, changed the
equation on the ground there was never true.
We have supported military assistance to a moderate opposition
in Syria, and we have done so at a pace that stretches the limits
of what they can absorb. But the fact of the matter is if you are
looking at changing the military facts on the ground, the kind of
involvement, the kind of involvement on the part of U.S.
military forces that would have been required would have been
significant enough that there would have been severe questions
about our international authority to do so. You don't have a UN
mandate; congressional authority -- we saw how that played out
even on the narrow issue of chemical weapons.
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And there was the possibility that we would have made the
situation worse rather than better on the ground, precisely
because of U.S. involvement, which would have meant that we
would have had the third, or, if you count Libya, the fourth war
in a Muslim country in the span of a decade. Having said all that --
the situation in Syria is not just heartbreaking, but dangerous.
Over the last two years I have pushed our teams to find out what
are the best options in a bad situation. And we will continue to
do everything we can to bring about a political resolution, to
pressure the Russians and the Iranians, indicating to them that it
is not in their interests to be involved in a perpetual war.
I'm always darkly amused by this notion that somehow Iran has
won in Syria. I mean, you hear sometimes people saying,
"They're winning in Syria." And you say, "This was their one
friend in the Arab world, a member of the Arab League, and it is
now in rubble." It's bleeding them because they're having to
send in billions of dollars. Their key proxy, Hezbollah, which
had a very comfortable and powerful perch in Lebanon, now
finds itself attacked by Sunni extremists. This isn't good for
Iran. They're losing as much as anybody. The Russians find
their one friend in the region in rubble and delegitimized.
And so there continues to be an opportunity for us to resolve
this issue politically. The international community as a whole
and the United States as the sole superpower in the world does
have to try to find a better answer to the immediate humanitarian
situation.
And we are doing everything we can to see how we can do that
and how we can resource it. But I've looked at a whole lot of
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game plans, a whole lot of war plans, a whole bunch of
scenarios, and nobody has been able to persuade me that us
taking large-scale military action even absent boots on the
ground, would actually solve the problem.
And those who make that claim do so without a lot of very
specific information. I'm sympathetic to their impulses, because
I have the same impulses. There is a great desire not just to stand
there, but to do something. We are doing a lot; we have to do
more. But we have to make sure that what we do does not make
a situation worse or engulf us in yet another massive enterprise
at a time when we have great demands here at home and a lot of
international obligations abroad.
Article 2.
The Washington Post
Putin's error in Ukraine is the kind
that leads to catastrophe
David Ignatius
2 Mar, 2014 -- Napoleon is said to have cautioned during an
1805 battle: "When the enemy is making a false movement we
must take good care not to interrupt him." The citation is also
sometimes rendered as "Never interrupt your enemy when he is
making a mistake." Whatever the precise wording, the
admonition is a useful starting point for thinking about the
Ukraine situation.
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Vladimir Putin has made a mistake invading Crimea, escalating
a crisis for Russia that has been brewing for many months. It
might have been beneficial if President Obama could have
dissuaded him from this error. But Putin's move into Crimea
appeared to spring from a deeper misjudgment about the
reversibility of the process that led to the breakup of Soviet
Union in 1991. The further Russia wades into this revanchist
strategy, the worse its troubles will become.
The Russian leader's nostalgia for the past was on display at the
Sochi Olympics. As David Remnick wrote last week in the New
Yorker, Putin regards the fall of the Soviet Union as a "tragic
error," and the Olympics celebrated his vision that a strong
Russia is back. That attitude led Putin to what Secretary of State
John Kerry described on Sunday as a "brazen act of aggression"
and a "violation of international ohli ations."
Kerry called on Putin to "undo this act of invasion." The
Russian leader would save himself immense grief by following
Kerry's advice, but that seems unlikely. His mistake in
Sevastopol may lead to others elsewhere, though hopefully Putin
will avoid reckless actions. But the more Putin seeks to assert
Russia's strength, he will actually underline its weakness.
Perhaps inevitably, given Washington's political monomania,
the big subject over the weekend wasn't Putin's criminal attack
on Crimea but whether Obama had encouraged it by being
insufficiently muscular. There are many valid criticisms to be
made of Obama's foreign policy, especially in Syria, but the
notion that Putin's attack is somehow the United States' fault is
perverse.
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