Israel is a
very pro-American country, maybe the most in the world. As in the past,
Israelis followed the U.S. presidential election with extreme interest, amazed
that the American political system did not produce more palatable presidential
candidates.
In a poll
taken following Donald Trump’s victory, 83% of Israelis said they consider
Trump a pro-Israel leader; by contrast, another poll showed that 63% view
Barack Obama as the “worst” U.S. president with regard to Israel in the last 30
years. Indeed, after eight years of tense relations with the Obama
administration, most Israelis are relieved to see a friend in the White House.
Moreover, on issues that are important to Israel—Iran and the
Palestinians—there seems to be a greater convergence of views than before.
Trump’s
stance on Iran is particularly important now, as Iran recently held a military
exercise to test its missile and radar systems after the Trump administration
imposed sanctions on Tehran for a recent ballistic missile test. When Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits Trump in Washington DC this month,
it’s worth following what the leaders will say about the Iran nuclear deal and
what kind of role the U.S. will play in Israel going forward.
Netanyahu
fought tooth and nail against the nuclear agreement negotiated by the Obama
administration with Iran. Trump slammed it as “one of the dumbest deals ever.”
Senior members of his administration share this view and are apprehensive about
Iranian intentions.
Even the
White House criticism of new settlement building plans – it called them
unhelpful to the peace process, but added that they are not impediments to
peace – represents a positive change to many Israelis.
Furthermore,
Trump’s promise to move the American embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to
Jerusalem seems more sincere than similar promises made by previous
presidential candidates. Throughout his campaign and into the early days of his
presidency, Trump has shown that he follows through, and is more concerned with
fulfilling his promises than flattering the electorate. Israelis cannot
understand why other countries refuse to accept Jerusalem as their capital and
to place their embassies in western Jerusalem, which is not, after all,
disputed territory. Picking David Friedman – an Orthodox, pro-settlement,
Jewish American who owns an apartment in Jerusalem – as ambassador to Israel
lends credence to Trump’s promise.
Several of
Trump’s positions that draw tremendous criticism at home and abroad are less
problematic for Israelis. For example, the idea of building a wall along the
US-Mexico border to stop illegal immigration is viewed in Israel as the
expression of the sovereign right of any nation to prevent undesirable elements
from entering its territory. Israel has built walls and fences to stop the
infiltration of terrorists and illegal immigrants from Palestinian territory.
Trump’s
diatribes against Muslims are unseemly, but Israelis can understand where he is
coming from, since they have been subjected to Muslim terrorism and Arab state
aggression for 100 years. The political correctness of the Obama years – when
the president refused to acknowledge radical Islam as the source of most of the
terrorism in the world – frustrated Israelis.
Thus,
Trump’s willingness to speak his mind is appreciated in Israel, even if some of
his statements border on the vulgar. It is refreshing to the Israeli ear to
hear an American presidential candidate not beating around the bush, but rather
addressing issues without the constraints of liberal political correctness.
This quality has earned Trump some popularity in Israel.
Israelis
well know that a portion of the Washington bureaucracy, especially at the
Department of State, and some of the media and academic elites are unfriendly
to Israel. They welcome a president who dislikes that bureaucracy and is
critical of those elites.
We should
not forget that since the late 1960s, Israelis have largely preferred
Republican presidents. Yitzhak Rabin, who served as Israel’s ambassador to
Washington from 1968 to 1973, openly supported the Republican presidential
candidate, Richard Nixon. Similarly, Prime Minister Netanyahu made his
preference for Mitt Romney over Obama abundantly clear. Unlike many European
politicians and American Democrats, Israelis are substantially nationalist and
conservative. The conservative Israeli Likud party has won more elections than
any other party since 1977.
Israelis
followed the decline of American international fortunes during the Obama years
with alarm. It frightens them to see America so weakened.
Thus, a
Trump who wants to make his country great again by increasing defense spending
and standing tall against America’s enemies abroad (especially Iran) strikes a
responsive chord among Israelis.
Finally,
Trump’s family biography endears him to Israelis. His daughter converted to
Judaism and belongs to an Orthodox community. Trump has Jewish grandchildren of
whom he is proud. His Jewish son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is an important
advisor. Living in New York may have sensitized him to the sensibilities of the
Jewish community. Moreover, he has always expressed strong support for the
Jewish state.
After eight
years of the distant President Obama in the White House – a president who used
his last days in office to lash out at Israel at the UN – it should not be
surprising that Israelis are looking forward, with some trepidation but even
more hope, to working with the new American president. While the euphoria
displayed by some right-wing circles in Israel is not warranted, an improvement
in bilateral relations is a realistic expectation.
Obama gave a
high priority to negotiating the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and was obsessed
with Jewish settlements in the West Bank. He estranged Israelis by not
distinguishing between Israeli building in Jerusalem and in the West Bank. He
often dished out “tough love” to Israel, as he called it when addressing a
synagogue in Washington, DC.
Trump and
his advisors, by contrast, seem more relaxed about the Israeli-Palestinian
issue, correctly understanding that it is by no means the most important
problem in the chaotic Middle East.
Source: Breakingisraelnews
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