Posts Tagged ‘joe biden’
Barack and Barak on Iran

Barack Obama (Source: CNN)
Barack at an event in Iowa yesterday:
“My job as president would be to try to make sure that we are tightening the screws diplomatically on Iran, that we’ve mobilized the world community to go after Iran’s program in a serious way and to get sanctions in place so that Iran starts making a difficult calculation. We’ve got to do that before Israel feels like its back is to the wall.”
Is he getting it? Possibly:
Obama said in Iowa that after visiting Israel last month, he believed Israel’s “general attitude is we will not allow Iran to get a nuclear weapon. They recognize there are no good military options but they also recognize that from their perspective it is unacceptable to allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon,” he added.

Ehud Barak
Contrast this to the equally important statement Ehud Barak (ours, that is) delivered last week after a meeting with Condoleezza Rice. The content of the meeting is not public, but Barak’s people told reporters afterwards that the Bush administration was opposed to a military strike. While the defense minister took pains to note that Israel would not tolerate a nuclear Iran, he also expressly acquiesced to American diplomacy in the near term:
“Our position is that no option is to be taken off the table, but in the meantime we have to make diplomatic progress.”
This isn’t too strange. The liberal Obama must demonstrate he understands the danger, while the hawkish Bush administration must demonstrate they are pursuing peace. It tells us little about the actual thinking on Iran of either Obama or Bush, and therefore little about any imminent Israeli or American plans vis-a-vis Iran, but it does at least demonstrate that everyone is speaking a common language.
We’re going to speculate here that Obama’s comments were meant to indicate that on Iran, at least, he is thinking strategically rather than ideologically, distancing himself from running mate Joe Biden, at least on this issue. This is a good thing.
Biden launches Obama’s ‘white working-class’ campaign

Joe Biden
It seems we’ve missed the point. Little has been said here about Biden’s significance inside America. Let us correct this mistake by bringing to your attention a New York Times piece from yesterday, according to which Obama campaign advisors have already laid out Biden’s task in the run-up to the November 4 election: campaigning in the four swing states of Florida, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Come again? These states all went for Hillary Clinton by wide margins (though of course in Michigan Obama wasn’t on the ballot). Specifically: Florida: Clinton 49.8, Obama 32.9; Michigan: Clinton 55.2, Uncommitted 40.1; Ohio: Clinton 54.3, Obama 44; Pennsylvania: Clinton 54.6, Obama 45.4. (Source: NYT. Click on the state names for percentages.)
Not only did these states go for Clinton, but more specifically, Obama had a tough time gaining traction among “working-class whites,” that amorphous demographic that, one would think, accounts for at least half of America. He was, the pundits opined, too “aloof” and “detached.”
Now consider Biden: a Catholic, grew up in a working-class family, considered close to the unions. Bingo. The Times even lists in detail Biden’s plan of attack against McCain, which will focus on McCain’s allegedly pro-Bush Senate record and the danger of McCain-appointed Supreme Court nominees. Biden’s Judiciary Committee record and 36 years in the Senate are expected to make his attacks more credible, and presumably the Obama campaign believes anything Biden says won’t count toward Obama’s efforts to appear above the fray.
Those are some clever folks running that campaign.
Betting on Iran
We suspect that Obama might turn out to be a strategic problem for Israel in facing its greatest immediate threat: Iran.
Consider this: Even if Obama agrees with Israel that Iran’s leadership is genuinely unpredictable (Ahmadinejad publicly gloats that he speaks to the Hidden Imam, the Shi’ite messiah), the simple fact is that his election would dangerously extend the window of opportunity Iran has to develop its nuclear weapon. Besides the months-long process of appointing thousands of top civil servants as the 1.8 million-strong American federal government undergoes a change in leadership, Obama has vowed to pursue a diplomatic course with the Iranian leadership.
That makes for January 2009 + perhaps 4 months of putting an Obama federal government in place + at least eight months of diplomacy before he could bring himself to declare said diplomacy “ineffective” = early 2010. During that time, with serious high-level US-Iranian diplomacy underway, Israel would find itself trapped between a developing Iranian bomb and an American administration that cannot acquiesce to an Israeli action that would torpedo its well-meaning statesmanship.
So, even assuming Obama understands – or comes to understand – the vastness of the danger facing the Middle East’s balance of power, his election grants more than a year’s breathing space for the Iranian program.
Does he understand?
Then Saturday happened, and with it the announcement that Joe Biden, talented, honest, pro-Israel and liberal, would be Obama’s running mate. Suddenly, problematic became downright dangerous.
Biden has consistently held out for a diplomatic solution with Iran, refusing even to upgrade sanctions in 1998 because he didn’t believe Yeltsin could implement them, and just last year slamming Bush’s anti-Iran proposals as “mindless.” On the campaign trail he issued a public threat to move for impeachment if Bush bombs Iran without Congressional approval. He’s even presented a plan for Iraq that converts the country into a decentralized federal republic – the sort of republic that could be free and stable in Europe but would be almost helpless as a counterweight to the centralized, driven Iranian dictatorship next door.
In short, Biden, a good man and unquestioned friend to Israel, is betting the farm on his assessment that the Ahmadinejad regime isn’t as bad, as immediately dangerous, as all that.
Now he’s Obama’s no. 2.



