Indyk: A disastrous choice for mediator

That such a politically jaundiced Jew is being proposed for this role is cause for grave concern.

Martin Indyk 370 (photo credit: Reuters)
Martin Indyk 370
(photo credit: Reuters)
The State Department has floated a trial balloon to test the idea of former US ambassador to Israel, Martin Indyk, serving as mediator in the forthcoming peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
It is not surprising that PA President Mahmoud Abbas has signaled his approval. What is incomprehensible is that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has done so.
Unfortunately, the prospect of genuine progress in the negotiations is extraordinarily slim. There is no evidence that the PA will compromise on a single issue. In the unlikely event that the weak, corrupt Abbas does make even a single concession, his Fatah supporters will immediately topple him.
Nonetheless, an “honest broker” is essential to the process. However, Indyk is not that broker. His track record in presiding over previous peace negotiations indicates that if re-appointed, he will, in all probability, direct negotiations in a manner to ensure that Israel will be blamed for their failure.
Indyk has had an impressive political career. Educated in Australia, he moved to the US where he joined AIPAC and subsequently held executive positions at prestigious Washington, DC, think tanks (executive director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and director of foreign policy at the Brookings Institution). He also has assumed key political positions (assistant secretary of state for Near East affairs in the Clinton administration).
After Indyk became a naturalized US citizen, president Bill Clinton appointed him ambassador to Israel.
He was the first person born outside the US as well as the first Jew to hold the position. He served two terms, from April 1995 to September 1997 and from January 2000 to July 2001.
Indyk’s rise in the political arena has been ascribed to his talent for adjusting to the prevailing political climate of the Democratic leadership.
When President Barack Obama was elected, Indyk aligned himself with the new leader and enthusiastically participated in Obama’s Israel-bashing and Netanyahu-snubbing. He was unsparing and, at times vicious in his criticism of our prime minister, and laid the bulk of the blame on Netanyahu for the breakdown in Israeli-Palestinian relations.
Indyk moved further and further to the left as his career unfolded. He served as international chairman of the New Israel Fund, an organization that has repeatedly been castigated for funding rabid anti-Zionist and anti-Israel NGOs, including several organizations that compiled distorted and false information for the notorious Goldstone Report, accusing the IDF of engaging in war crimes.

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Aside from occasional lip service to their failings, Indyk became an aggressive apologist for the Palestinians and at one stage even identified himself with those defending Arafat’s rebuff of former prime minister Ehud Barak’s extreme concessions at Camp David.
Indyk has made outrageous claims about Israel’s destabilizing effect on the Middle East, and the need for it to bend to the will of the US, threatening, “If Israel is a superpower and does not need $3 billion in military assistance and protection, and [does not require] the efforts of the US to isolate and pressure Iran, then go ahead and do what you like. If you need the US, then you need to take American interests into account... Israel has to adjust its policy to the interest of the United States or there will be serious consequences.”
He has also made the obscene charge that it was Israeli intransigence that contributed to US military casualties in Afghanistan, accusing Israel of endangering “a vital security interest of the United States.”
The “intransigence” he was alluding to was the settlement construction then taking place in Jewish neighborhoods in east Jerusalem.
He stooped even lower when he stated that Netanyahu should take into account that Obama was obliged to write 30-40 condolence letters a week. To climax his antagonistic attitude towards Israel, in 2010 Indyk publicly urged Netanyahu and the Israeli government to cede the Golan Heights to Syria.
Indyk frequently invokes the memory of murdered prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, who he refers to as “Israel’s greatest strategic thinker.”
But Rabin would have undoubtedly rejected an American spokesman or diplomat with the chutzpa to make the demands on Israel that Indyk has. He would have dismissed him for his lack of respect for Israel’s sovereignty and his treatment of it as a vassal state.
Certainly, Rabin would never have endorsed Indyk’s calls to divide Jerusalem and to make unilateral territorial concessions.
Most of us continue to dream of peace. However, we recognize that with the current chaos and violence in the region, the likelihood of moving forward with a peace “partner” who sanctifies murder and engages in vicious incitement is almost a mirage. Yet to demonstrate our commitment to leave no stone unturned we have succumbed to pressure and unfortunately compromised the rights of terror victims and their families, by releasing hundreds of mass murderers as goodwill gestures, and plan to release 82 more, in order to sit at the negotiating table.
Yet the extraordinary lengths to which we will go for the sake of peace will not move us forward if the US mediator is an American Jew, whose recent track record is indistinguishable from that of J Street in seeking to pressure Israel to make unilateral concessions.
That such a politically jaundiced Jew is being proposed for this role is cause for grave concern. Netanyahu would be well advised to bite the bullet now and resist pressure to accept Indyk as mediator.
Otherwise we will once again be accused of intransigence and inflexibility, if not the cause of an upsurge in violence that Abbas has already threatened should his demands go unmet.The writer’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com