Hypermasculine bravado as political weapon
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I took the opportunity of watching both of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s U.S. speeches this week – in front of over 16,000 attendees at AIPAC (American Israeli Public Affairs Committee) and at a joint session of the Congress – and I followed the process and developing controversy from the time Speaker of the House of Representatives, John Boehner, first announced that he had extended and the Prime Minister had accepted his invitation to present.
During both speaking venues, with all his praise at the beginning of his speeches for President Obama and his support for the state of Israel and the safety and prosperity of the Israeli people, the clear subtext was to plant distrust of the President’s negotiating abilities with Iran specifically, and to call into serious question his foreign policy initiatives more generally.
Benjamin Netanyahu gave no real alternatives to Obama’s negotiated settlement — even in advance of all the terms coming out — other than war. To remain in power, Netanyahu has to talk tough, to exert his brand of hypermasculine bravado like every other warlord going back through time.
What was true from ancient times remains true today, from the ancient Persians, Assyrians, Canaanites, Greeks, Romans, Babylonians, Celts, Scandinavians, Christian Crusaders, Islamic Jihadists, Fascists, Nazis, nationalists and neo-nationalists of every stripe — Warlords don’t have use for peace because peace doesn’t have use for warlords.
President Obama, on the other hand, doesn’t view the world in strict binaries — good/evil, black/white, us/them, all/nothing – but understands nuance and shades. He doesn’t have to prove himself by exerting a form of destructive hypermasculinity. He knows who he is, and he has no need for playing damaging gendered competitions.
Netanyahu’s speech, its timing, and the process by which it came about was a travesty from the outset: from the purely political manner by which the Republicans, specifically Speaker Boehner, broke with protocol in his attempts to embarrass and discredit the President by inviting the Prime Minister to present what amounted to his delayed counter-response to Obama’s recent optimistic and forward thinking State of the Union Address to Congress. In his invitation to the Prime Minister, in what turned out to be a pep rally for the Republican Party, Boehner inserted himself directly into the upcoming Israeli elections on Netanyahu’s behalf.
Before coming to the U.S., Netanyahu asserted that when delivering his speech to Congress, he would be speaking for all Jews. Well, Mr. Prime Minister, I need you to know that you certainly do not speak for me, a proud life-long Jew.
While Netanyahu positioned the Iranian Ayatollah as the modern-day evil Persian vizier Haman under King Ahasuerus on the eve of the Jewish holiday, Purim, I would tell Mr. Netanyahu that he certainly is no Queen Esther.
Mr. Netanyahu, this is not 1938, and the President of the United States is not English Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain. Obama is certainly under no illusions with whom he is dealing. He is not as naïve and untested as you imagine. Any negotiated settlement he may arrive at will not include any clause making it irreversible. He will take no options off the table that will ultimately protect the security of Israel, the region, the United States, and the world community.
I ask you and others to follow the wise and poignant words of the late great John Lennon:
“All we are saying, is give peace a chance.”
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Photo Credit: AP Photo/Gali Tibbon
A spot-on archetypal representation, “hypermasculine” for this man. I love this article and it made my day as I was so depressed since Nentanyahu’s theatrics. This is the John Wayne of the old West and even if its more Churchill than Chamberlain, we live in different times and Iran is not Nazi Germany. Diplomacy and negotiating are skills of progressed consciousness beyond former times. In my humble opinion, hypermasculinity is a fear response that comes from an intractable position of both guilt and a need to validate what you have been doing or you have to face your own wrongs,… Read more »
Contrary to what I read here, what I’m seeing is that there is an amazing amount of Americans who support Benjamin Netanyahu.
I agree. Barack Obama is no Neville Chamberlain who was considered one of the great statesmen of his era. And the modern Middle East is more complicated then 1938 Europe. Using your word it definitely requires more nuance. On paper the President is in way over his head.
Thumbs up to both of you.
And you are not in a very small country, the only one that was given you, surrounded by your sworn enemies, and ignored by your alleged ally, while remembering your persecution over at least 4000 years. Do not kid yourself Warren. Assuming they survive Israel will be your savior. Masada was their defining moment. Whethrr you think it doesn’t fit your view of the current world as you would like ot yo look like, both sides are entrenched in a litetally 1000 year old argument and an activist like Obama is foolisj at best to tjink he has any influence… Read more »