Relations With the US the Day after Geneva


We must preserve the American public sympathy for Israel, but protect ourselves from the hostile officials in the White House and the government ministries.

It is doubtful whether there is anything to add to what has been said about the indecent deal signed with Iran in Geneva. It is already clear who has benefited and who has lost, who sent warnings and who was sent to sleep, who fulfilled expectations and who betrayed. But the deed has been done and now it only makes sense to draw conclusions — which must be global, not only because most of the world does not like us, but also because the Geneva Accord is a link in the chain of American acts and omissions, which illustrates how dangerous it is to trust the current residents of the White House.

The Geneva Accord is a lighthouse of cynicism and the sanctification of short-term interests on the behalf of small-scale politicians from the West. But it could not have happened without the driving force of the deal — the vision of Obama’s administration — Kerry. Historically, the Obama-Kerry-Geneva vision crushes the Western world’s conclusions, after the Nazi adventure.

The U.S. has attempted for most of its existence to separate itself from the rest of the world and focus on its economic and health insurance issues. Then came the German provocation during World War II, Pearl Harbor and the exposure of the Nazi monster — and brought it out of its shell.

The American conclusion after the Hitler era was that it must become the world’s “good cop,” as to not repeat “peace for our time” a la Chamberlain and his associates. However, Obama and Kerry broke the line of this American conclusion, while crushing a row of allies who believed the promises they were given by them.

But the dogma currently emerging from Geneva goes even further. Now it is not just a matter of conception of blindness and stupidity, but intentional self-deception and informed abandonment of friends and allies, due to fear of the enemy.

The actions of Kerry and Obama may even be worse than Chamberlain’s self-deception in Munich in 1938. All the leaders of the Western world know that Iran is bluffing. They heard the voices calling from Tehran in the past week, in real time. They also understand the meaning of a nuclear threat to Israel and the Gulf countries, but evade any confrontation and invent complicated theories to disguise this.

The U.S. — the nation and the administration — is a good friend of the Jewish people and the state of Israel. As opposed to the basic sentiment in Europe that preserves an anti-Semitic core, the American sentiment is friendship and appreciation toward us. But, those who decide are the administration currently office, who deep down, holds hostility toward us. Therefore — on the day after Geneva — a way has to be found to preserve the sympathy of the American public, but to be protected from the hostile officials populating the White House and the government ministries.

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