John Boehner’s Outrageous Plan To Help A Foreign Leader Undermine Obama

“I think anyone who is going to establish a Palestinian state and to evacuate territory is giving radical Islam a staging ground against the State of Israel,”
“I think any­one who is going to estab­lish a Palestinian state and to evac­u­ate ter­ri­to­ry is giv­ing rad­i­cal Islam a stag­ing ground against the State of Israel,”

House Speaker John Boehner has invit­ed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to speak to a joint ses­sion of Congress in February, on the top­ic of Iran. On the sur­face, this might seem inno­cent enough. Israel is a close American ally. Surely he should be wel­come in Congress, par­tic­u­lar­ly to dis­cuss an issue that con­cerns his country.

On the sur­face, Netanyahu’s speech will be about oppos­ing Obama’s nuclear talks with Iran and sup­port­ing Republican-led sanc­tions meant to blow up those talks.

But there’s more than meets the eye here. Netanyahu is play­ing a game with US domes­tic pol­i­tics to try to under­mine and pres­sure Obama — and thus steer US for­eign pol­i­cy. Boehner wants to help him out. By reach­ing out to Netanyahu direct­ly and set­ting up a vis­it with­out the knowl­edge of the White House, he is under­min­ing not just Obama’s poli­cies but his very lead­er­ship of US for­eign pol­i­cy. The fact that Netanyahu is once again med­dling in American pol­i­tics, and that a US polit­i­cal par­ty is sid­ing with a for­eign coun­try over their own pres­i­dent, is extreme­ly unusu­al, and a major break with the way that for­eign rela­tions usu­al­ly work.

Netanyahu is trying to actively undermine Obama and unseat the Democrats

Throughout Obama’s tenure, he has clashed with Netanyahu. That is no secret, and it’s noth­ing new for American and Israeli lead­ers to dis­agree, some­times very pub­licly. But Netanyahu, begin­ning in May 2011, adopt­ed a new strat­e­gy to try to deal with this: using domes­tic American pol­i­tics as a way to try to push around Obama.

During a trip that month to Washington, Netanyahu pub­licly lec­tured Obama at a press con­fer­ence and then gave a speech to Congress slam­ming the pres­i­dent. That speech, also host­ed by Republicans, received many stand­ing ova­tions for Netanyahu’s fin­ger-wag­ging crit­i­cism of Obama.

At first it appeared that Netanyahu was mere­ly try­ing to steer Obama’s for­eign pol­i­cy in a direc­tion that he, Netanyahu, pre­ferred. Obama want­ed Netanyahu to freeze Israeli set­tle­ment growth in the West Bank, for exam­ple; Obama has also sought, in his sec­ond term, to reach a nuclear deal with Iran that Netanyahu earnest­ly believes is a bad idea.

Netanyahu’s first respon­si­bil­i­ty is to Israel’s nation­al inter­ests, not to Obama, so it makes sense that he would push for poli­cies that he thinks are good for Israel.

But in 2011 Netanyahu start­ed going a step fur­ther, and appeared to be work­ing to active­ly remove Obama from pow­er. During the 2012 elec­tion cycle, Netanyahu and his gov­ern­ment were increas­ing­ly crit­i­cal of Obama and sup­port­ive of Republicans, includ­ing pres­i­den­tial can­di­date Mitt Romney, for whom he at times appeared to be active­ly cam­paign­ing. Netanyahu’s crit­i­cisms of Obama were so point­ed that some of Obama’s oppo­nents cut a cam­paign ad out of them. It became a joke with­in Israel that Netanyahu saw him­self not as the leader of a sov­er­eign coun­try, but as the Republican sen­a­tor from Israel.

But try­ing to unseat a for­eign leader is not a joke, espe­cial­ly when that for­eign leader is fund­ing your mil­i­tary and guar­an­tee­ing your nation’s security.

Netanyahu’s gov­ern­ment ramped down this strat­e­gy after Obama won; he even gave Obama the world’s most awk­ward con­grat­u­la­tions speech. But through­out Obama’s sec­ond term he has once again grad­u­al­ly esca­lat­ed from try­ing to influ­ence Obama to active­ly under­min­ing both the pres­i­dent and his par­ty. The new Israeli ambas­sador to the US for months would not even both­er to meet with National Security Advisor Susan Rice, yet held many meet­ings with Republican fundrais­er Sheldon Adelson. Israel’s for­eign pol­i­cy, in oth­er words, was more focused on under­min­ing the American lead­er­ship than work­ing with it.

Republicans, aware that Americans are sup­port­ive of Israel, have urged on Netanyahu’s anti-Obama cam­paign since it began in 2011. Inviting him to speak to Congress that year was shrewd domes­tic pol­i­tics, and it will be shrewd leg­isla­tive pol­i­tics next month when Netanyahu pub­licly sup­ports the GOP’s sanc­tions efforts.

This makes sense with­in the nar­row scope of domes­tic pol­i­tics — if you can use some­thing to con­vince vot­ers your par­ty and its poli­cies are a bet­ter choice than your oppo­nents, you use it, even if that some­thing is a for­eign head of state. But mem­bers of Congress are pur­port­ed­ly sup­posed to put their coun­try before their par­ty, and sid­ing with a for­eign leader over your own pres­i­dent does­n’t seem to do that. Neither does cheer­ing a for­eign leader when he lam­basts the pres­i­dent of the United States.

More to the point, it was a real­ly sig­nif­i­cant breach when some con­ser­v­a­tives sup­port­ed Netanyahu’s implic­it lob­by­ing on behalf of the Romney cam­paign. If a for­eign coun­try wants to unseat your pres­i­dent, that is gen­er­al­ly con­sid­ered an out­ra­geous breach. But Netanyahu has been invit­ed in, and with the 2016 pres­i­den­tial elec­tions ramp­ing up it appears like­ly he will be invit­ed in once more to implic­it­ly run against the Democrats.

This speaks, in a very real sense, to just how extreme polit­i­cal polar­iza­tion has become in Washington.

This sort of practice is bad for America’s ability to conduct foreign policy

To be very clear, this is not just a breach of pro­to­col: it’s a very real prob­lem for American for­eign pol­i­cy. The Supreme Court has cod­i­fied into law the idea that only the pres­i­dent is allowed to make for­eign pol­i­cy, and not Congress, because if there are two branch­es of gov­ern­ment set­ting for­eign pol­i­cy then America effec­tive­ly has two for­eign policies.

The idea is that the US gov­ern­ment needs to be a sin­gle uni­fied enti­ty on the world stage in order to con­duct effec­tive for­eign pol­i­cy. Letting the pres­i­dent and Congress inde­pen­dent­ly set their own for­eign poli­cies would lead to chaos. It would be extreme­ly con­fus­ing for for­eign lead­ers, and for­eign publics, who don’t always under­stand how domes­tic American pol­i­tics work, and could very eas­i­ly mis­read which of the two branch­es is actu­al­ly set­ting the agen­da. (This con­fu­sion, by the way, is exact­ly what some Republicans are hop­ing to cre­ate in Iran with new sanctions.)

Republicans who never rises and clay for their own President gives Netanyahu several standing ovations
Republicans who nev­er ris­es and clap for their own President gives Netanyahu sev­er­al stand­ing ovations

This could also allow a for­eign coun­try to play those two branch­es off of each oth­er. That’s in part what Netanyahu is attempt­ing to do here, and it’s work­ing. The Obama admin­is­tra­tion did not even find out about Netanyahu’s planned vis­it to Washington until Boehner announced it. The Republicans are attempt­ing to run a for­eign pol­i­cy that’s sep­a­rate from the actu­al, offi­cial US for­eign policy.

One more anti-Obama speech from Netanyahu on the floor of Congress is not going to break US for­eign pol­i­cy, of course. But it’s trou­bling that Republicans are will­ing to breach such an impor­tant prin­ci­ple for some pret­ty mod­est short-term gains.
See orig­i­nal sto­ry here:John Boehner’s out­ra­geous plan to help a for­eign leader under­mine Obama