5 hours and 11 minutes ago by MJ Rosenberg
My friend, who has been to at least a dozen AIPAC conferences, said that this year's reminded him of the scene in Titanic where the first class passengers chipped pieces off the iceberg to make their drink. Then he corrected himself. "The ship isn't going to sink. The conference was more like those people outside the Capitol screaming 'kill the bill' after everyone knew Obama had the votes."
I know what he meant. AIPAC is like a closed community where everyone believes pretty much the same thing and never guesses what is happening outside. I was like that in 1984 when Ronald Reagan carried 49 states against former Vice President Walter Mondale: "How could that happen when I don't know a single person who voted for Reagan?" I wondered.
Inside AIPAC, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu brought the audience to its feet repeatedly as he said the very things that brought US-Israel relations to the lowest point in decades.
This is the part of the speech that received the greatest cheers and guaranteed that the White House would give Netanyahu the coldest reception ever given an Israeli prime minister the next day.
"Jerusalem is not a settlement. It is our capital...All these neighborhoods are within a five-minute drive from the Knesset... Everyone knows that these neighborhoods will be part of Israel in any peace settlement. Therefore, building in them in no way precludes the possibility of a two-state solution."
The administration understands how utterly ridiculous Netanyahu's statement is. It has never implied that Jerusalem is a settlement. Its position is that the final status of Jerusalem must be decided in negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians, just like every other piece of land added to Israel after the 1967 war.
As for Netanyahu's "everyone knows" formulation, it is bogus. After all, "everyone knows" that Nablus, Hebron, Ramallah and dozens of other West Bank cities will be inside the Palestinian state after negotiations. Can they just annex them now? (see this great article from Foreign Policy on the subject)
"Everyone knows", including Netanyahu and every one of his predecessors since Yitzhak Rabin, that totally Palestinian areas of Jerusalem will almost surely not be part of Israel after negotiations are completed, largely because Israel doesn't want them and the Palestinians do.
http://mediamattersaction.org/blog/201003240006