Washington Watch: It is dawning on Netanyahu that Obama is likely to be around for another four years.
By DOUGLAS M. BLOOMFIELDNetanyahu Meet the Press NBC (370)(photo credit: Screenshot)
It’s been no secret that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu would prefer Mitt Romney as president of America.He’s had a very tense relationship with Barack Obama, who came to office intent on restarting a peace process the Israeli prime minister would prefer to see shelved. There has been an ongoing flow of anti-Obama leaks coming out of “sources” in Jerusalem often identified in the Israeli media as “close to the prime minister’s office.”Romney, who has known Netanyahu since their early days in the financial world in Boston (they tell differing versions of how well they knew each other), is closer to the prime minister in some of his views. He is much more bellicose toward Iran, although he won’t say what he would do differently than Obama, and he shows no apparent interest in reviving the peace process.They share some neo-con advisors and, most importantly, some major financial benefactors, particularly controversial casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson.Romney has repeatedly accused Obama of tossing Israel “under the bus.” It’s the mantra of his appeal to evangelical and Jewish voters and contributors in his campaign to make Israel a partisan wedge issue.David Gregory pressed Netanyahu on that question Sunday on Meet the Press, and when the prime minister avoided answering, Gregory said his silence was tantamount to agreeing with the Republican candidate. Netanyahu finally replied, “There’s no bus.”Netanyahu passed up repeated opportunities on several Sunday morning talk shows to endorse Romney or criticize Obama. “The only bus that is really important is the Iranian nuclear bus. That’s the one that we have to derail [sic].”Netanyahu may personally prefer Romney but for a guy working in a city with a world-famous wall, he knows how to read the handwriting.Just last week his aides were complaining he was being snubbed by Obama for not meeting with him when the prime minister travels to the UN later this month. He sounded petulant and whiney, even when it turned out Obama was having no one-on-one meetings with foreign leaders. By Sunday Netanyahu shrugged it off as a mere scheduling conflict and boasted: “I have met with President Obama more than any other world leader has, and for that I am grateful.... We talk all the time.”Netanyahu also retreated from his angry retort last week to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s statement that the United States was “not setting deadlines” he had demanded for thwarting Iran’s nuclear ambitions. And Defense Secretary Leon Panetta added that red lines like the ones Netanyahu has been insisting upon are “the kind of political arguments that are used to try to put people in a corner.”