Photo Credit: Flash 90
An anti-Netanyahu V15 campaign billboard poster in Tel Aviv.

The same Arabs are UNRWA “refugees” who “enjoy” – make that “suffer” – the refugee status that UNRWA has forced on several generations of Arabs who used to live in Israel. UNRWA and the Arab world’s objective is to flood Israel with Arabs and reduce Jews to a minority, paving the way for an Arab-dominated country that, by extension, would include the Palestinian Authority.

President Obama and his foreign policy sages can’t be that stupid not to realize Abbas’ career is based on the Palestinian Authority not being a country. Abbas knows that if that were ever to come about, the new state would not last very long. It only is a matter of time which comes first – bankruptcy that would result in anarchy and civil war, or anarchy and civil war that would result in bankruptcy.

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So why should President Obama try to topple the Netanyahu government.

One reason is hate. Obama hates Netanyahu, who has proven better at political chess than him, but Obama cannot stand to lose, and that is the second reason – ego.

When Herzog and Livni lost the elections, Obama also lost them. Obama can’t even lose a gold game gracefully.

A third reason is Iran. Netanyahu showed up Obama in March by delivering a convincing speech and warning to Congress not to let Obama get away with a “bad deal.”

The “framework” agreement that the United States and the other P5+1 countries approved is proving to be full of so many holes that it wouldn’t pass for Swiss cheese.

But if the Netanyahu would simply go away, a key obstacle to a “bad deal” would be removed.

A fourth reason could be that President Obama is acting and putting on a “two-state” charade for the sake of the United Nations and the European Union, if not for the Nobel Prize committee that prematurely awarded him the Peace Prize in his first term.

 

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Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu is a graduate in journalism and economics from The George Washington University. He has worked as a cub reporter in rural Virginia and as senior copy editor for major Canadian metropolitan dailies. Tzvi wrote for Arutz Sheva for several years before joining the Jewish Press.