Obama's Mideast trip: how he plans to win over the Israeli public, and why
Obama's four-day Mideast trip will include hours of meetings with Prime Minister Netanyahu, but it's his overture to the Israeli public that may help him address regional issues in the future.
An Israeli flag flies on a hill near the West Bank Jewish settlement of Elazar, near Bethlehem, Sunday. President Obama is due to make his first official visit to Israel and the Palestinian Territories this week, looking to improve ties after sometimes rocky relations with both sides during his first term in office.
Ronen Zvulun/Reuters
Washington
President Obama鈥檚 visit to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan this week is scheduled to include more than five hours of meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as the president seeks to reduce tensions with the leader of America鈥檚 closest Middle East ally on issues ranging from Iran to peace with the Palestinians.
But the trip, which begins Wednesday morning when Mr. Obama lands in Tel Aviv, is also about repairing relations with another audience that will be key to the president鈥檚 prospects for advancing important regional goals for his second term: the Israeli public.
鈥淭his trip is very much focused on the public diplomacy side [of relations with Israel], much less on the hard substance,鈥 says Natan Sachs, an expert in Israeli foreign policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington.
The White House is calling a speech Obama will give to the Israeli public 鈥 with an audience made up largely of young people 鈥 the centerpiece of the president鈥檚 visit. 鈥淭he speech,鈥 Mr. Sachs says, 鈥渋s the vehicle for the president to make his reintroduction鈥 to a skeptical Israel.
Israelis, who never embraced Obama the way many other audiences around the world did, have never quite forgiven this American president for putting nearby Cairo on the list of sites for his first term鈥檚 signature global issues speeches 鈥 without even making a stop in Israel.
But Obama, with a speech that warms up his image among Israelis, would be able to win not just popularity points, but even critical support for US initiatives in the region, Sachs says.
鈥淔or the Israelis, it鈥檚 not, 鈥榃hat have you done for me lately,鈥 it鈥檚 鈥楧o you love me?鈥 鈥 he says.
Further evidence that Obama is out to redefine Israelis鈥 impression of him comes from two of the iconic Israeli sites he will visit on his trip: the exhibit of the Dead Sea scrolls, which is seen as Obama鈥檚 recognition of the Jewish people鈥檚 roots in Israel; and the grave of Zionist visionary Theodor Herzl. Both stops are aimed at correcting the impression left from Obama鈥檚 Cairo speech that he sees Israel鈥檚 creation as the result of the Holocaust rather than a millennia-old right to ancient Jewish lands. 聽聽聽聽
Obama is 鈥渂ound to get a bounce鈥 in Israel from his public diplomacy offensive, Sachs says, adding that improved public views of Obama could make a difference down the road.
鈥淭he Israeli public will punish a prime minister who has a poor relationship with a popular American president,鈥 he says. Thus a more popular Obama could lead to 鈥渁 more pliant Netanyahu,鈥 he adds, for example on issues related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The sense that Obama鈥檚 trip is really more about improving the climate for future initiatives than about setting down an ambitious agenda is prominent in White House pre-trip commentary.
鈥淭here are obviously going to be significant decisions in the聽months聽and聽years聽ahead聽about Iran, about Syria, about Israeli-Palestinian peace,鈥 says Ben Rhodes, deputy national security adviser for strategic communications. Discussions Obama will have with Israeli and other leaders 鈥渃an frame those decisions that ultimately will come down the line,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat's the way in which the president is approaching the trip.鈥 聽
The perception of tilling the ground for the future is echoed by regional analysts.
鈥淭his is a down-payment trip,鈥 says Aaron David Miller, vice president for new initiatives at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington. 鈥淚f Obama鈥檚 stock goes up [as a result of the visit] in the eyes of the Israeli public, it will put additional pressure on Netanyahu.鈥
The perception that Obama aims to make incremental progress with this trip 鈥 while laying the groundwork for a potentially brighter horizon 鈥 also applies at the regional level, others say. 鈥淭his trip is about managing Middle East problems, not solving them,鈥 says Haim Malka, deputy director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington.
Whether the issue is Iran or Syria or the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Obama is visiting the region with no answers in his pocket but with an eye on keeping any of a number of crises from spinning out of control, Mr. Malka and other analysts say.
Iran is certain to be topic No. 1 for Prime Minister Netanyahu. Obama will underscore his view, which he laid out to Israeli television last week, that there is still a 鈥渨indow鈥 for an international diplomatic effort to resolve concerns about Iran鈥檚 uranium enrichment program.
Yet even as Obama argues that diplomacy backed up by sanctions deserves more time, the Israeli leader 鈥渨ill try to convince Obama that only threatening the use of force鈥 to stop Iran鈥檚 nuclear progress 鈥 and meaning it 鈥 will have an impact on the Iranians, Malka says.
And while the civil war in Syria may not get top billing, the gravity of the violence and the growing regional implications of the two-year-old conflict are quickly moving Syria up on the regional agenda, some experts say.
鈥淪yria is quite frankly the most burning issue they [Obama and Netanyahu] have on the table to discuss,鈥 says David Ottoway, a senior scholar at the Wilson Center. 鈥淚f this is a year of diplomacy toward Iran, it is also a year of trying to decide when and if the US and Israel are going to intervene鈥 in Syria to safeguard and stop the transfer of chemical weapons, he says.
Nor is Obama expected to lay out any new initiative for advancing the goal of a 鈥渢wo-state solution鈥 to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. One reason is that Obama鈥檚 鈥渇ingers were burnt鈥 when he last tried to nudge the peace process along, says Martin Indyk, a former US ambassador to Israel who is now director of the foreign policy program at Brookings.
But even if Obama was inclined to kick-start the peace process with a renewed effort, the two sides in the conflict simply aren鈥檛 ready, Ambassador Indyk and others say. Netanyahu has just cobbled together a new coalition government (after January elections) that is largely focused on domestic economic and social issues. And the Palestinians remain deeply divided between Fatah and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank, and Hamas in Gaza.
Obama will make the short trip from Jerusalem to Ramallah in 鈥渢he Beast,鈥 the president鈥檚 armored limousine, to meet with President Abbas on Thursday. But Obama won鈥檛 even attempt a charm offensive with the Palestinian public, instead making some time in his Ramallah schedule to meet informally with a group of Palestinian youths.
The president鈥檚 last stop on a four-day trip will be Jordan 鈥 and there again, there鈥檚 a strong sense that the visit is more about preparing for the 鈥渟ignificant decisions鈥 of the future than about solving problems today.
Obama will meet with King Abdullah, one of America鈥檚 closest Arab partners 鈥 but one whose country is increasingly feeling the weight of the Syrian refugee crisis. The growing humanitarian crisis only adds to tensions in Jordan over a struggling economy and steady 鈥 but by many accounts insufficient 鈥 political reforms.
By visiting Jordan, Obama is signaling that he wants to include in his trip an Arab country that the US foresees as a partner in addressing the region鈥檚 issues, analysts say 鈥 and these days Jordan may have stood out as his least problematic option.
Underscoring how things have changed in the Middle East since Obama gave his Cairo speech in May 2009, CSIS鈥檚 Malka says, 鈥淚t would be way too complicated for the president to wade into Egypt at the moment.鈥