Wall Street Journal   by Michael Oren - former Israeli Ambassador to America
‘Nobody has a monopoly on making mistakes.” When I was Israel’s 
ambassador to the United States from 2009 to the end of 2013, that was 
my standard response to reporters asking who bore the greatest 
responsibility—President Barack  Obama or Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu—for the crisis in U.S.-Israel relations.
I
 never felt like I was lying when I said it. But, in truth, while 
neither leader monopolized mistakes, only one leader made them 
deliberately.
Israel blundered in how it announced the expansion 
of Jewish neighborhoods and communities in Jerusalem over the border 
lines that existed before the Six Day War in 1967. On two occasions, the
 news came out during Mr. Netanyahu’s meetings with Vice President  Joe Biden.
 A solid friend of Israel, Mr. Biden understandably took offense. Even 
when the White House stood by Israel, blocking hostile resolutions in 
the United Nations, settlement expansion often continued.
In a 
May 2011 Oval Office meeting, Mr. Netanyahu purportedly “lectured” Obama
 about the peace process. Later that year, he was reported to be backing
 Republican contender Mitt Romney in the presidential elections. This 
spring, the prime minister criticized Mr. Obama’s Iran policy before a 
joint meeting of Congress that was arranged without even informing the 
president. 
Yet many of Israel’s bungles were not committed by 
Mr. Netanyahu personally. In both episodes with Mr. Biden, for example, 
the announcements were issued by midlevel officials who also caught the 
prime minister off-guard. Nevertheless, he personally apologized to the 
vice president.
Mr. Netanyahu’s only premeditated misstep was his
 speech to Congress, which I recommended against. Even that decision, 
though, came in reaction to a calculated mistake by President Obama. 
From the moment he entered office, Mr. Obama promoted an agenda of 
championing the Palestinian cause and achieving a nuclear accord with 
Iran. Such policies would have put him at odds with any Israeli leader. 
But Mr. Obama posed an even more fundamental challenge by abandoning the
 two core principles of Israel’s alliance with America.
The first
 principle was “no daylight.” The U.S. and Israel always could disagree 
but never openly. Doing so would encourage common enemies and render 
Israel vulnerable. Contrary to many of his detractors, Mr. Obama was 
never anti-Israel and, to his credit, he significantly strengthened 
security cooperation with the Jewish state. He rushed to help Israel in 
2011 when the Carmel forest was devastated by fire. And yet, immediately
 after his first inauguration, Mr. Obama put daylight between Israel and
 America.
“When there is no daylight,” the president told 
American Jewish leaders in 2009, “Israel just sits on the sidelines and 
that erodes our credibility with the Arabs.” The explanation ignored 
Israel’s 2005 withdrawal from Gaza and its two previous offers of 
Palestinian statehood in Gaza, almost the entire West Bank and half of 
Jerusalem—both offers rejected by the Palestinians.
Mr. Obama also voided President  George W. Bush’s
 commitment to include the major settlement blocs and Jewish Jerusalem 
within Israel’s borders in any peace agreement. Instead, he insisted on a
 total freeze of Israeli construction in those areas—“not a single 
brick,” I later heard he ordered Mr. Netanyahu—while making no 
substantive demands of the Palestinians.
Consequently, Palestinian President  Mahmoud Abbas boycotted 
negotiations, reconciled with Hamas and sought statehood in the U.N.—all
 in violation of his commitments to the U.S.—but he never paid a
 price. By contrast, the White House routinely condemned Mr. Netanyahu 
for building in areas that even Palestinian negotiators had agreed would
 remain part of Israel.
The other core principle was “no 
surprises.” President Obama discarded it in his first meeting with Mr. 
Netanyahu, in May 2009, by abruptly demanding a settlement freeze and 
Israeli acceptance of the two-state solution. The following month the 
president traveled to the Middle East, pointedly skipping Israel and 
addressing the Muslim world from Cairo.[...]
 
 
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