The Delaware Gazette

Israeli leader closely involves himself in US race

In this Sept. 11, 2012, photo, Israeli Prime Min­is­ter Ben­jamin Netanyahu speaks in Jerusalem. Some­times it seems as if Repub­li­can pres­i­den­tial con­tender Mitt Rom­ney has two run­ning mates. There’s Wis­con­sin Rep. Paul Ryan to help him out on bud­gets, deficits and other domes­tic mat­ters. And then there’s Netanyahu on for­eign pol­icy. (Asso­ci­ated Press File | Gali Tibbon)

TOM RAUM

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Some­times it seems as if Repub­li­can pres­i­den­tial con­tender Mitt Rom­ney has two run­ning mates. There’s Wis­con­sin Rep. Paul Ryan to help him out on bud­gets, deficits and other domes­tic mat­ters. And then there’s Israeli Prime Min­is­ter Ben­jamin Netanyahu on for­eign policy.

Netanyahu has been inject­ing him­self into the U.S. pres­i­den­tial race big time. It’s extremely rare, almost unheard of, for a for­eign leader to do that. Most, in fact, try their hard­est to run the other way.

Rom­ney has some­times echoed hard­line Israeli posi­tions sim­i­lar to those of Netanyahu, although not always inten­tion­ally in pub­lic — such as a newly dis­closed video clip of a pri­vate event in which he tells wealthy sup­port­ers that Pales­tini­ans “have no inter­est” in peace with Israel.

Per­sonal friends since they worked together in Boston finan­cial houses as young men, the two seem to see eye to eye on many U.S.-Israeli issues.

And Netanyahu increas­ingly has been crit­i­cal of Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s fail­ure to pub­licly declare a “red line” for Iran — one that could trig­ger a U.S. mil­i­tary response if crossed.

His involve­ment seemed to reach a high degree of inten­sity over the week­end as the Israeli prime min­is­ter, who spent much of his child­hood in the Philadel­phia sub­urbs and grad­u­ated from the Mass­a­chu­setts Insti­tute of Tech­nol­ogy, appeared on sev­eral Sun­day TV news shows.

Asked on NBC’s “Meet the Press” whether Iran already had crossed his “red line,” Netanyahu answered with a foot­ball reference:

“They’re in the red zone. You know, they’re in the last 20 yards. And you can’t let them cross that goal line. You can’t let them score a touchdown.”

“This is a mat­ter of urgency,” he told CNN, call­ing on Obama to take the kind of action Pres­i­dent John F. Kennedy took in giv­ing the Soviet Union an ulti­ma­tum dur­ing the Cuban mis­sile crisis.

Not­ing that Obama has said that it would be unac­cept­able for Iran to pos­sess nuclear weapons, Netanyahu said, “If you’re deter­mined to pre­vent Iran from get­ting nuclear weapons, it means you’ll act before they get nuclear weapons.”

Rom­ney has said he’d chart his pol­icy toward Israel, if elected, by study­ing every­thing Obama has said or done — and doing the exact opposite.

In one of sev­eral newly dis­closed video clips taken secretly dur­ing a pri­vate fundraiser in May, Rom­ney says that “the Pales­tini­ans have no inter­est what­so­ever in estab­lish­ing peace” and that the con­flict “is going to remain an unsolved problem.”

“We have a poten­tially volatile solu­tion but we sort of live with it and we kick the ball down the field and hope that ulti­mately, some­how, some­thing will hap­pen and resolve it,” he said. Rom­ney added: “The idea of push­ing on the Israelis to give some­thing up to get the Pales­tini­ans to act is the worst idea in the world.”

Rom­ney stood by his posi­tions at a news con­fer­ence although acknowl­edged he could have phrased them better.

Pales­tin­ian law­maker Hanan Ashrawi called Romney’s remarks “irre­spon­si­ble and dan­ger­ous and both igno­rant and prej­u­diced. He accused the Repub­li­can pres­i­den­tial can­di­date of “pan­der­ing to the Jew­ish lobby.”

Both Netanyahu and Pales­tin­ian Pres­i­dent Mah­moud Abbas declined to com­ment on Romney’s taped remarks.

While for­eign lead­ers have not made a habit of get­ting involved in U.S. elec­tions, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev once bragged to Kennedy that “We elected you.”

When Kennedy asked what he meant, Khrushchev said the Soviet Union expressly decided to wait to release cap­tured U-2 spy plane pilot Gary Pow­ers until after the 1960 elec­tion to keep the Repub­li­can can­di­date, Vice Pres­i­dent Richard Nixon, from claim­ing he could deal bet­ter with the Soviets.

Rom­ney and Netanyahu are “two peas in a pod,” said his­to­rian Dou­glas Brink­ley of Rice University.

Brink­ley said it’s rare for for­eign lead­ers to get involved in U.S. elec­tions since British lead­ers tried in the early 1800s. But he also said “world lead­ers who went to col­lege in the United States seem to feel a spe­cial kin­ship to Amer­ica, and often a feel­ing that they should inter­ject themselves.”

“Lead­ers keep their eye on each other, but they try to stay away from each other’s national pol­i­tics,” said Stephen Hess, a pres­i­den­tial scholar at the Brook­ings Institution.

In cam­paign speeches, Rom­ney fre­quently claims Obama has turned his back on Israel and is too soft on Iran.

Yet despite their pol­icy dis­agree­ments, both Obama and Rom­ney seem to both be say­ing much the same thing on the sub­ject of a “red line.”

Obama says his red line is “that we’re not going to accept Iran hav­ing a nuclear weapon” — with­out being more spe­cific. And Rom­ney says, “My red line is Iran may not have a nuclear weapon.”

Anthony Cordes­man, a Mid­dle East expert at the Cen­ter for Strate­gic and Inter­na­tional Stud­ies, said, “You have two pres­i­den­tial can­di­dates work­ing away to see who can get the most votes, and an Israeli prime min­is­ter work­ing to fig­ure out how to get the most Amer­i­can support.”

Netanyahu claims Iran is six months to seven months away from hav­ing 90 per­cent of the ingre­di­ents for a nuclear bomb. White House spokesman Josh Earnest said that Obama “does believe that there is a diplo­matic win­dow that remains open to pre­vent­ing that red line from being crossed.”

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