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Diplomacy & Crisis News

In France, The Fight Over Charlie Hebdo’s Legacy Is Getting Ugly

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 20:10
A controversial left-wing sociologist says that last January's show of unity was more about racism than patriotism. And the French are pissed.

In Pakistan, Playing the Blame Game

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 18:39
Blaming India and failed domestic policies for insecurity in Pakistan has become a habit. Instead, constructive criticism of current operations against militants needs to bring about true reform.

Hong Kong’s Not Special

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 18:34
And Beijing should stop perpetuating the self-serving notion that it is.

What Did Scott Walker Learn During His “Listening Tour” of Israel?

Foreign Policy Blogs - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 18:27

Photo by John Pemble via Flickr

On the eve of the Israeli elections back in March, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu proclaimed that there would be no Palestinian state under his watch. This created an international outcry and he quickly walked the statement back after a great success on election day.

On Wednesday, he met with European Union Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini and, for the first time since the election, outright proclaimed his commitment to a two-state solution. “We want a peace that would end the conflict once and for all… I don’t support a one-state solution, I don’t believe that’s a solution at all, I support the vision of two states for two peoples.”

Netanyahu has, however, taken numerous steps in recent days to imply otherwise:

  • On Jerusalem Day, he vowed that Israel’s capital city would never be divided.
  • He appointed Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Silvan Shalom, a man who does not support a two-state solution, to be responsible for negotiations with the Palestinians (should they resume down the road).
  • He appointed HaBayit HaYehudi’s Ayelet Shaked as Justice Minister. Less than one year ago, Shaked proclaimed in a Facebook post that “the entire Palestinian people is the enemy… including its elderly and its women, its cities and its villages, its property and its infrastructure.”
  • His newly reappointed Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon launched a three-month trial program that would have segregated buses for Israelis and Palestinians in the West Bank. Netanyahu nixed it after one-day, deciding ultimately that it was “unacceptable.”

But words matter, and how Bibi talks about the future matters. When he speaks to a delegation from the EU, his words are reported. Israelis now know that he is (still) committed to the peace process (again), at least on paper.

Wonder what he says to international delegations when the cameras are not rolling? This week, we might have gained some insight.

Wisconsin Governor and presumptive GOP presidential candidate Scott Walker visited Israel last week on a five-day “listening tour.” He released no itinerary and spoke to no press. But he did allow his trip to be livetweeted by one of his tour guides, Matt Brooks, Executive Director of the Republican Jewish Coalition.

Walker met with Zionist Union leader Isaac Herzog, Jewish Agency chairman Natan Sharansky, Habayit Hayehudi leader Naftali Bennett, Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein, National Infrastructure Minister Yuval Steinitz, Israel Defense Forces and former Deputy Chief of Staff Uzi Dayan, U.S. Ambassador Dan Shapiro and of course Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu. Peter Beinart astutely points out that Walker, despite going on this educational trip to Israel, never met with any Palestinians (Israeli citizens or otherwise).

What that means is that Walker got a very Jewish Israeli side of the conflict. That’s fine — he is entitled to speak with whoever he wants. And likewise, he is not required to meet with anybody he doesn’t want to speak with.

But here’s where we get some insight into what Netanyahu and his allies are likely saying behind closed doors. Walker came home last week and paid a visit to Sean Hannity. When the subject of his trip to Israel came up, Walker’s comment on the two-state solution was that, “it’s not the time for that now.” He declared that Israel would “need defensible and secure borders and they’re a long way off from having that happen.” He continued: “We were looking there and you could see [from] a helicopter up in the air you could see how close the threats were from Hezbollah, the Islamic State, down to the problems in Gaza.”

Walker’s fresh perspective on the two-state solution is not exactly nuanced. The fact that Israel needs “defensible and secure borders” could realistically be an argument in favor of a two-state solution. While some argue that the settlements act as a safety net, functioning like a “bulletproof vest for Israel” (that’s according to Silvan Shalom, Israel’s new point person or Palestinian negotiations), they also keep Israel from having a true border, which can then be fully defended and secured.

While talking about the two-state solution, Walker also brings Hezbollah and the Islamic State into the mix, with a vague mention to “the problems in Gaza.” Maybe Walker believes that a two-state solution will be more viable once we see a major shift toward stability and peace in the Middle East. If that is the case, then “long way off” should be taken quite seriously.

Walker pontificating on the future of Israel and the Middle East, however, is not really the point. The point is that Walker just went on a listening tour to Israel and while there, he met behind closed doors with top Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Netanyahu. And the first real comment Walker made following his trip was to say that the two-state solution is not viable, at least for the foreseeable future.

Did he hear from these top Israeli leaders how much they yearn to find a way toward a two-state solution, and then return home and and offer Hannity a completely different take? Maybe. But probably not.

Follow me on Twitter @jlemonsk.

Photographs of the Ruins of Palmyra Now Threatened by the Islamic State

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 17:35
Palmyra is home to some of the world's best-preserved ruins.

There’s a Satellite Orbiting the Earth Named After Skrillex’s Dog

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 17:07
The Grammy-winning DJ partnered with Google to send a satellite into space.

Emploi atypique en Allemagne

Le Monde Diplomatique - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 16:44
/ Allemagne, Inégalités, Travail - Europe / , , - Europe

Richesse et pauvreté en Allemagne

Le Monde Diplomatique - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 16:44
/ Allemagne, Développement, Inégalités - Europe / , , - Europe

Wounded Warrior Project suing others over name, forcing them to change names

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 16:43
The outfit seems to think it has a copyright on the notion of helping wounded warriors.

The novels Winston Churchill read while winning his part of World War II

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 16:40
If people tell you they don’t have time to read for pleasure, here are some of the books Winston Churchill read while leading the West during World War II.

Soldiers and sailors in small-town papers

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 16:34
One of the things I like about reading small-town newspapers (I read two weeklies where I live in Maine, and follow the websites of two other papers) is the short stories about members of the community who have gone off to the military.

Former Head of UN Peacekeeping: How to Navigate the Fog of Peace in the Middle East

Crisisgroup - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 15:43
ean-Marie Guéhenno is the president and CEO of the International Crisis Group and former head of UN Peacekeeping. He is the author of The Fog of Peace, a Memoir of International Peacekeeping in the 21st Century (Brookings press).

Bin Laden Documents Released; Indian Air Force Lands Jet on Expressway; SIGAR Says Pentagon Wasted $36 Million

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 15:15
Pakistan Bin Laden documents released On Wednesday, the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence released a large number of documents that were picked up by the U.S. SEALs at Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abottabad, Pakistan, on May 2, 2011 (CNN, NYT). The 103 documents released include correspondence between bin Laden and his ...

America’s Virulent, Extremist Counterterrorism Ideology

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 14:40
Forget the long war; we’re now in the thick of perpetual war.

Dr. Strange-oil

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 14:31
Four slightly insane -- but not entirely unrealistic -- ways that Vladimir Putin could spike the price of oil to save Russia's economy.

Saudi Arabia’s Cruel Stranglehold

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 14:30
As the Yemen bombing campaign resumes, the wounded are piling up in Sanaa — but the hospitals are starved of supplies to staunch the bleeding.

Situation Report: Confusion in Iraq; the bin Laden data dump; losing the information war in the Mideast; and more

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 13:48
By Paul McLeary with Ariel Robinson Remember earlier this week when the New York Times and the Washington Post — going on information provided by unnamed U.S. officials — told us that the Islamic State used the cover of a sandstorm to avoid coalition airstrikes while taking Ramadi? It was a unique and fascinating narrative. ...

U.N. Announces Yemen Peace Talks as Ship Crisis Averted

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 13:34
U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon announced that the United Nations will host peace talks on the conflict in Yemen in Geneva starting May 28. Unlike previous proposals to hold talks in Riyadh, diplomats will meet in a neutral city. The goal of the talks will be to “restore momentum towards a Yemeni-led political transition process,” ...

Osama bin Laden Would Not Have Taken Ramadi

Foreign Policy - Thu, 21/05/2015 - 01:50
The new trove of bin Laden documents reveals just how different al Qaeda and the Islamic State really are.

The Five-Minute Commencement Speech

Foreign Policy - Wed, 20/05/2015 - 23:45
Or, what IR theory can teach you about living a happy and productive life.

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