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Bibi gets bollocked - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Geopolitical Hotspots (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-20.html) +--- Thread: Bibi gets bollocked (/thread-13232.html) |
Bibi gets bollocked - David Guyatt - 30-10-2014 What sort of Obama guy would say this, I wonder, when Obama appears to have a concluded deal with Iran and all is now peace? Quote:Benjamin Netanyahu is 'a chickens**t prime minister' and 'coward', says US official Bibi gets bollocked - David Guyatt - 31-10-2014 From Consortium News Quote: Bibi gets bollocked - Peter Lemkin - 31-10-2014 I'm not sure about chickenshit, but Fascist would fit just fine for him. Bibi gets bollocked - Anthony Thorne - 31-10-2014 [size=12]Another warning to Obama. There's been a few of these lately it seems. ............. The Chickenshit Lobby Is Mad As Hell[/SIZE] but just how mad are they? (Justin Raimondo, AntiWar, October 31st 2014) http://original.antiwar.com/justin/2014/10/30/the-chickenshit-lobby-is-mad-as-hell/ Israel, Israel, Israel, Israel can we ever escape the endless kvetching of its partisans? In the media, in both houses of Congress, on the campuses and in the streets, Israel's fifth column in America is everywhere, making its presence felt. From Chuck Hagel's confirmation battle to the public relations campaign accompanying their latest Gaza massacre, the Jewish state's on-the-ground army of American flacks, publicists, and fanatic rank-and-filers mobilizes the moment someone looks cross-eyed at Bibi Netanyahu and the Chickenshit scandal has them screaming to high heaven. The scandal was created, unsurprisingly, by Israel's semi-official flack-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, a former Israeli prison guard turned journalist, whose pronouncements carry the authority of someone with impeccable connections in both Tel Aviv and Washington. Writing in The Atlantic, he reports: "The other day I was talking to a senior Obama administration official about the foreign leader who seems to frustrate the White House and the State Department the most. The thing about Bibi is, he's a chickenshit' this official said … Goldberg has a carefully cultivated image as a moderate-to-liberal Obama sympathizer, and he goes into his familiar riff about how the rapidly fraying US-Israeli relationship is largely a function of Bibi's truculence. Yet it's clear Goldberg who surely knew what the response to his reporting would be, even inside the President'sown party is appalled by this display of candor: "'The good thing about Netanyahu is that he's scared to launch wars,' the official said, expanding the definition of what a chickenshit Israeli prime minister looks like. The bad thing about him is that he won't do anything to reach an accommodation with the Palestinians or with the Sunni Arab states. The only thing he's interested in is protecting himself from political defeat. He's not [Yitzhak] Rabin, he's not [Ariel] Sharon, he's certainly no [Menachem] Begin. He's got no guts.'" The Lebanese and Gazans might quibble with the notion that Bibi's "scared to launch wars," but then again those weren't wars, they were massacres. And why should Bibi fight anyone who can possibly fight back when he has the United States to do his dirty work for him? Goldberg's assessment of the rupture is that "The fault for this breakdown in relations can be assigned in good part to the junior partner in the relationship, Netanyahu" but perhaps Bibi doesn't recognize his junior status because that isn't the way it worked during most of the Bush years. Obama is apparently much less willing than his predecessor to sacrifice American lives while Bibi directs the action from behind the scenes. The President's initial reluctance to get more deeply involved in Syria, not to mention his eagerness to get the heck out of Iraq ASAP, had Tel Aviv and its American amen corner fuming. On the other side of the equation, the dramatic escalation of Israel's "settlement"-building campaign has at least some in the Obama administration infused with a "red-hot anger," as Goldberg reports the phrase used by one Obama administration official, possibly the same one cited here: "I ran this notion by another senior official who deals with the Israel file regularly. This official agreed that Netanyahu is a chickenshit' on matters related to the comatose peace process, but added that he's also a coward' on the issue of Iran's nuclear threat. The official said the Obama administration no longer believes that Netanyahu would launch a preemptive strike on Iran's nuclear facilities in order to keep the regime in Tehran from building an atomic arsenal. It's too late for him to do anything. Two, three years ago, this was a possibility. But ultimately he couldn't bring himself to pull the trigger. It was a combination of our pressure and his own unwillingness to do anything dramatic. Now it's too late.'" The reality is that there was never any possibility of an Israeli strike, as I pointed out in 2011, when speculation was at an all-time high: "The problem with this alleged plan is that Israel doesn't have the military capacity to do the job and do it well: Iran's nuclear facilities are enclosed within hardened sites, and are spread out to such a degree that Israeli war planes would have trouble reaching them. While the Israelis have recently tested a long-range missile that has the capacity to hit Iranian targets, the idea that they could take out all the intended targets in one fell swoop is simply a fantasy. Therefore, this alleged "debate" taking place within the Israeli leadership, complete with a phony "investigation" by Netanyahu into who leaked the nonexistent Israeli attack plan,' is a non-event. The whole thing, in short, is a bluff. "But who is being bluffed here? Not the Iranians, who are surely aware of Israel's incapacity. The volume of the war hysteria is being turned up with one purpose in mind: the Israelis want the US to do their dirty work for them. This is a threat aimed not only or even primarily at Iran, but at us." The Obama administration is well-aware of Israel's technical incapacity, as is Goldberg's source: so what, exactly, is the purpose of this manufactured controversy? The Israelis are hoping a propaganda campaign in the US will subvert the administration's plans to reach a deal with Iran. As Goldberg reports; "Netanyahu has told several people I've spoken to in recent days that he has written off' the Obama administration, and plans to speak directly to Congress and to the American people should an Iran nuclear deal be reached." Goldberg's contribution to this whiny narrative "Israel has been thrown under the bus!" is pretty clear, but then again none of this is surprising. After all, what is Goldberg doing in America aside from acting as a kind of semiofficial (albeit ostensibly self-critical) Voice of Israel in the US media? What's surprising is how Netanyahu, in a speech to the Knesset, took the opportunity to answer his critics in the Obama administration: "Netanyahu angrily insisted he was under attack simply for defending Israel,' adding that he cherished' Israel's relationship with the US." The famously combative Israeli Prime Minister went on to say: "When there are pressures on Israel to concede its security, the easiest thing to do is to concede. You get a round of applause, ceremonies on grassy knolls, and then come the missiles and the tunnels." Bibi, who spent many years in the United States, is surely cognizant of what his "grassy knoll" reference connotes. You can argue it was just an infelicitous phrase, or that Bibi was referring to himself, not Obama. Maybe so. But what if, say, an Iranian official, even a low-ranking one, had said such a thing? The uproar would be deafening. And so the question must be asked: was Bibi threatening the President of the United States? If we take seriously Goldberg's depiction of the poisoned relationship between Bibi and Obama, the possibility can't be completely dismissed. The Chickenshit Lobby, otherwise known as Israel's amen corner in the US, is mad as hell but just how mad are they? I don't know the answer to that question, but as the prospect of a peace agreement with Iran looms larger, those whose job it is to protect the President need to take this potential threat seriously. As we've seen recently, the White House isn't exactly an impregnable fortress. In the meantime, it's time to start reevaluating the "special relationship" in light of an Israeli leader who talks about the "grassy knoll" while denouncing an American president. Bibi gets bollocked - R.K. Locke - 01-11-2014 http://mondoweiss.net/2014/10/netanyahus-respond-chickenshit Why did Netanyahu respond to chickenshit with grassy knoll' remark? Israel/Palestine Annie Robbins on October 31, 2014 47 Comments PM shoots down President (Graphic by @NewryForGaza) PM shoots down President (Graphic by @NewryForGaza) Wading through all the chickensh*t over the last few days Netanyahu's "grassy knoll" comeback somehow missed out on all the action, but what the hoot guys? Where I come from that terminology only means one thing, as far as I know, that applies to the lexicon anywhere in America, if not the world. Hey, even Google agrees with me. And what are the chances Netanyahu and/or his speechwriters don't know this? Nada. Impossible. Why would Netanyahu make a reference to one of the most alarming chapters in American history, the assassination of a beloved American president? And for many, an assassination still shrouded in mystery and deceit? I just thought it was very weird. Where is our press? Winding down after scrutinizing, dissecting and eviscerating Goldberg's now infamous Chickensh*t article, Justin Raimondo, in The Chickenshit Lobby Is Mad As Hell but just how mad are they? makes the argument had a leader of Iran slipped "grassy knoll" into a message to an American president the press would have gone bonkers. I agree. What's surprising is how Netanyahu, in a speech to the Knesset, took the opportunity to answer his critics in the Obama administration: "Netanyahu angrily insisted he was under attack simply for defending Israel,' adding that he cherished' Israel's relationship with the US." The famously combative Israeli Prime Minister went on to say: "When there are pressures on Israel to concede its security, the easiest thing to do is to concede. You get a round of applause, ceremonies on grassy knolls, and then come the missiles and the tunnels." Bibi, who spent many years in the United States, is surely cognizant of what his "grassy knoll" reference connotes. You can argue it was just an infelicitous phrase, or that Bibi was referring to himself, not Obama. Maybe so. But what if, say, an Iranian official, even a low-ranking one, had said such a thing? The uproar would be deafening. And so the question must be asked: was Bibi threatening the President of the United States? If we take seriously Goldberg's depiction of the poisoned relationship between Bibi and Obama, the possibility can't be completely dismissed. Do you think anyone at the White House noticed Netanyahu's phraseology? Me too. So why the silence from the press? Grassy knoll, it only means one thing here in America: Screehshot of Google "grassy knoll" It only means one thing. Screehshot of Google "grassy knoll" Netanyahu is widely faulted for helping to incite Rabin assassination, marching in a rally where guys were holding up a coffin for Rabin. Bibi gets bollocked - R.K. Locke - 01-11-2014 And this just in... http://news.yahoo.com/outrage-over-israeli-newspaper-s-cartoon-depicting-9-11-230612840.html Israeli newspaper's political cartoon sparks outrage over 9/11 imagery By Ed Hornick October 30, 2014 7:06 PM Yahoo News A cartoon appearing in an Israeli newspaper is under fire. (Haaretz.com) An editorial cartoon in Israel's Haaretz newspaper is drawing criticism for using Sept. 11 imagery to depict U.S.-Israel relations under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In it, a character resembling Netanyahu is seen flying a small plane into a building that resembles a World Trade Center tower. An American flag flies atop the skyscraper. The cartoon, which appeared Thursday, comes after the Israeli leader was reportedly criticized by an Obama administration official as being a "chickensh--." The paper, and its political cartoonist Amos Biderman, faced widespread criticism on Twitter. Are you kidding, @Haaretz? An anti-Semitic cartoon in the pages of an Israeli paper. Yeesh. http://t.co/8Rr538Nb4e pic.twitter.com/fepqF5LFBR Jake Wallis Simons (@JakeWSimons) October 30, 2014 Biderman defended his work in a tweet: "The message is that Bibi is arrogantly and wantonly destroying Israel's ties with the U.S. and leading us to a disaster on the scale of 9/11." Biderman later told Haaretz that he "wasn't sufficiently aware of the great sensitivity that 9/11 holds for Americans." The cartoon, he added, was a criticism of the controversial right-leaning politician. "I was mocking Bibi," he said. "He's been acting like a bull in a china shop with the United States, which is Israel's most important strategic asset." |