The advance teamMeanwhile, Republican operatives Ari Fleischer and Matt Brooks showed up in Jerusalem the following week and offered their assessment of how the American presidential race is shaping up and how Israel and the region will play into it.Explaining that they had come to Israel to motivate US citizens in Israel to cast absentee ballots in the upcoming elections, Brooks listed the regional challenges that Obama is failing to squarely meet, namely Iran’s troubling nuclear drive, the rise of Islamist factions in Egypt and other Arab states, and the civil war in Syria.“The person who is [America’s] commander-in-chief in January 2013 is going to have to deal with these issues on day one,” he said, adding that Obama has been “naïve at best” in his approach to the threat from Iran and other foreign policy problems.Even on domestic issues like the economy, Brooks remarked that “we seem to have a president who is just really not up to the job.”Brooks conceded that a majority of US Jews would continue to vote Democratic this election cycle, but his goal was to maintain the pattern of a higher percentage of American Jews voting Republican each time.“There is no doubt that Mitt Romney will do extremely well among Jewish voters,” Brooks said. “Success will be the continuing process of gaining market share at the expense of the Democrats, especially in key battleground states.”While Obama’s defenders in the Jewish community argue that US military and intelligence cooperation with Israel have never been better than under this presidency, Brooks told The Christian Edition that most of the upgrades in defense systems and intelligence sharing were already in the hopper under his predecessor, President George W. Bush.“Obama’s team has been dancing in the end zone about supplying Israel with the X-Band radar,” he quipped, “but it was the persistence of one man, Republican senator Mark Kirk (Illinois), which made that happen.”“I don’t ever want to have a US president who makes us stop and scratch our heads and wonder, does he have Israel’s back,” chimed in Fleischer.“These are the stakes in this upcoming election. The choice is between Gov. Romney and President Obama, between pushing Israel around as President Obama has done and has tried to do; or Gov. Romney, who will stand strong at Israel’s side, especially now when Israel is the only stable element in the Middle East.”“That moral bond, that connection that is made, between America and Israel, sits firmly in Mitt Romney’s heart,” Fleischer assured. “This is why, when push comes to shove… there is nothing [Obama] would like more than to find a way to be neutral in the struggle between the Israelis and the Palestinians. He would like to be the great man of the minute, as opposed to doing the right thing and standing on the side of the nation that is America’s ally, Israel.Fleischer suggested that although Jews in Israel may have been as enamored with Obama in 2008 as most American Jews, they were some of the first to sour on him, due to the way the Obama administration decided to openly air its disputes with the Netanyahu government.Citing polls as early as June 2009 which found that only a small percentage of Israelis still considered Obama to be pro-Israel, Fleischer said the drop in support among Jews in Israel acted as a harbinger for their counterparts in the United States.“The polls in The Jerusalem Post reverberated around the Jewish community in America,” Fleischer said.“They were an early warning signal in the US that there were cracks in Obama’s armor. In 2009, American Jews were so pro-Obama. Israelis saw the cracks first, and now the American Jewish community is going through a significant case of buyer’s remorse.”Whether that change of heart among Jewish voters will be a decisive factor come November remains to be seen. But Romney has clearly calculated it is both fair and advantageous to question Obama’s support for Israel in a potential second term, when he would no longer have to face the electorate.While Democrats are countering that neither party should ever play politics with the bipartisan issue of Israel, it does seem Obama has left himself open to attack on his suspect pro-Israel credentials.
Romney plays Israel card on Obama
Mitt Romney has criticized President Obama's treatment of Israel.
The advance teamMeanwhile, Republican operatives Ari Fleischer and Matt Brooks showed up in Jerusalem the following week and offered their assessment of how the American presidential race is shaping up and how Israel and the region will play into it.Explaining that they had come to Israel to motivate US citizens in Israel to cast absentee ballots in the upcoming elections, Brooks listed the regional challenges that Obama is failing to squarely meet, namely Iran’s troubling nuclear drive, the rise of Islamist factions in Egypt and other Arab states, and the civil war in Syria.“The person who is [America’s] commander-in-chief in January 2013 is going to have to deal with these issues on day one,” he said, adding that Obama has been “naïve at best” in his approach to the threat from Iran and other foreign policy problems.Even on domestic issues like the economy, Brooks remarked that “we seem to have a president who is just really not up to the job.”Brooks conceded that a majority of US Jews would continue to vote Democratic this election cycle, but his goal was to maintain the pattern of a higher percentage of American Jews voting Republican each time.“There is no doubt that Mitt Romney will do extremely well among Jewish voters,” Brooks said. “Success will be the continuing process of gaining market share at the expense of the Democrats, especially in key battleground states.”While Obama’s defenders in the Jewish community argue that US military and intelligence cooperation with Israel have never been better than under this presidency, Brooks told The Christian Edition that most of the upgrades in defense systems and intelligence sharing were already in the hopper under his predecessor, President George W. Bush.“Obama’s team has been dancing in the end zone about supplying Israel with the X-Band radar,” he quipped, “but it was the persistence of one man, Republican senator Mark Kirk (Illinois), which made that happen.”“I don’t ever want to have a US president who makes us stop and scratch our heads and wonder, does he have Israel’s back,” chimed in Fleischer.“These are the stakes in this upcoming election. The choice is between Gov. Romney and President Obama, between pushing Israel around as President Obama has done and has tried to do; or Gov. Romney, who will stand strong at Israel’s side, especially now when Israel is the only stable element in the Middle East.”“That moral bond, that connection that is made, between America and Israel, sits firmly in Mitt Romney’s heart,” Fleischer assured. “This is why, when push comes to shove… there is nothing [Obama] would like more than to find a way to be neutral in the struggle between the Israelis and the Palestinians. He would like to be the great man of the minute, as opposed to doing the right thing and standing on the side of the nation that is America’s ally, Israel.Fleischer suggested that although Jews in Israel may have been as enamored with Obama in 2008 as most American Jews, they were some of the first to sour on him, due to the way the Obama administration decided to openly air its disputes with the Netanyahu government.Citing polls as early as June 2009 which found that only a small percentage of Israelis still considered Obama to be pro-Israel, Fleischer said the drop in support among Jews in Israel acted as a harbinger for their counterparts in the United States.“The polls in The Jerusalem Post reverberated around the Jewish community in America,” Fleischer said.“They were an early warning signal in the US that there were cracks in Obama’s armor. In 2009, American Jews were so pro-Obama. Israelis saw the cracks first, and now the American Jewish community is going through a significant case of buyer’s remorse.”Whether that change of heart among Jewish voters will be a decisive factor come November remains to be seen. But Romney has clearly calculated it is both fair and advantageous to question Obama’s support for Israel in a potential second term, when he would no longer have to face the electorate.While Democrats are countering that neither party should ever play politics with the bipartisan issue of Israel, it does seem Obama has left himself open to attack on his suspect pro-Israel credentials.