After the bizarre public display of affection for Bibi Netanyahu yesterday on Capitol Hill, today's much more subdued response to President Obama's address at Westminster stood in stark contrast. Perhaps it was just that one audience was British and the other was a wildly indiscriminate mob of transparently pandering jack-in-the-boxes. Perhaps one audience was listening and the other was not. 

The U.S. Congress whooped and hollered and leapt to their feet so often for Netanyahu that you expected at any moment they would surge forward and turn the well of the House into a mosh pit. And despite that and the fact that the theme song for the event could easily have been "Bad Romance," these not-so-little monsters were actually not going wild for a pop star but for a politician so out-of-touch with the moment and the views of even the majority in his own country that he might well be known as Prime Minister Gaga.

Of course, much like audiences at most rock concerts I have ever been to, no one came for the lyrics. It was clear the members of the Congress from both sides of the aisle had arrived so intent on demonstrating their support for Bibi that they weren't actually listening to a word he was saying. Because if they were, they would have realized they were effectively cheering for the death of any prospect of peace between Israel and the Palestinian people. And that, presumably, might have muted their response.

While one hopes the prime minister enjoyed himself, he would be wise not to either read too much into the reaction or look for it to have any lasting consequence. Because yesterday's display of kabuki political theater was not about him ... or even about Israel.

The speech was about Obama. It was arranged by Republicans for purely domestic political reasons and when Republicans cheered it was to say to evangelical Christian and Jewish supporters of Israel, "See, we love you the most." And when Democrats stood up, it was to say, "The president didn't mean any harm with that remark about the 1967 borders." Their applause couldn't possibly have had anything to do with America's long-term interests in a peaceful, sustainable, two-state solution or they would have been sitting on their hands the whole time.

Because Netanyahu continues to mistake intransigence for strength in a situation in which old formulations actually put Israel at much greater risk.

Interestingly, the most notable display of enthusiasm in the U.S. president's speech before Parliament was actually about Obama too. It was not for his carefully crafted and occasionally torturously nuanced themes celebrating the U.S.-British relationship, our shared virtues or our common international agenda. In fact, after a long period of stony (attentive? stoic?) silence, it was the mention of the fact that the president was the grandson of a Kenyan cook in the British army that produced one of the few outbursts of palpable enthusiasm. 

Once again, the narrative of Barack Obama's life was more important than the substance of what he was saying or doing as president. Like Bibi, he was lucky in that.  Because frankly, the speech itself -- especially the bit about Libya in which he unsuccessfully tried to hold it up as an example of how the U.S. and Britain would not stand idly by and let a tyrant kill his own people-didn't really hold up to much scrutiny. Whenever he said Libya, what you heard was "Syria" or "Bahrain" or any of the far more abundant circumstances when both Washington and London seem completely happy to look the other way. The rest of the speech was full of the kind of ersatz Churchillian constructions and flourishes about policies that lacked enough clarity, urgency or lift to warrant or forgive the attempted evocation of Britain's great wartime PM. 

Not that Obama's speech was bad. It wasn't. It was a solid effort that achieved its purpose. It just wasn't newsworthy or special in any way except again, the personal narrative, because this grandson of a Kenyan cook in the British army was also the first U.S. president to address the British parliament at Westminster. Which is not a small story. In fact, it's quite a moving one. But in the grand scheme of things perhaps the best thing about the speech was neither its content or its context but the fact that the members of parliament present actually appeared to be listening to what the president was saying.  That is a lesson the mother of all parliaments ought to pass on to her offspring on this side of the Atlantic.

PETER MACDIARMID/AFP/Getty Images)

 

ZATHRAS

9:41 PM ET

May 25, 2011

A Question Begged

After the exchange of speeches and statements between President Obama and Netanyahu over the last week, what does the Obama administration do now?

Obama delivered his speech. Like many Obama speeches, his AIPAC address was a success on its own terms. Other things being equal, though, it left us back where we started, with the United States being seen around the world as content to have its policy toward the Middle East dictated by the Israeli government, and the President powerless to change this.

Congress is much weaker as an institution than it was 20 or so years ago, so the mortifying lack of dignity in its response to Netanyahu doesn't mean as much as a similar reaction might have then. The key question, as it was two years ago after the Cairo speech, is whether Obama has a realistic plan of action to ensure that the speech is not the end of his administration's effective engagement. Two years ago, Obama didn't, and it was. What has changed?

 

KUNINO

10:41 PM ET

May 25, 2011

Another display that the US might be, well, odd

With a corps of beady-eyed journalists sitting in the chamber or by their television sets making a checkmark each time a speech audience leaps to applaud, naturally we wind up with assessments of speeches that are heavy on the applause and light on the substance of the speech. The only thing missing from Netanyahu's speech as theater was the Bush-era spectacle of the nation's best-trained killers, senior military officers in splendid uniforms gloriously aglow with decorations some of which rewarded valor, leaping to their feet to lead the less-fit Congressional bodies. Thank God.

But this week's resulting initial coverage was hardly distinguished. The usually perceptive Dana Milbank of the Washington Post says the Netanyahu speech was terrific because it persuaded the 21-year-old Israeli au pair for this daughter that Netanyahu was right. And, by the way, it "attracted 59 rounds of applause." This from American politicians being nice about a foreign leader's attack on their own government.

So good was the speech, wrote applause-meter MIlbank, that it proved that the US president's speech on the same topic had been rather like pure crap. Wow.

We'll see. Those assessing the Israeli leader's speech since the Congressional applause faded are more sceptical. Congresspersons who took the opportunity for a strenuous physical workout could hardly be expected to have taken any coherent interest in what the Israeli prime minister really said, and what, if anything, he really left out.

This week's affair reminds me of president Bush's address to the UN general assembly in September 2002 -- note the date -- lying about Iraq and calling for international action to attack it. Scanning the silent audience, one news camera picked up fretful tiny Condoleezza Rice raising herself on one haunch to mutter something to Colin Powell, towering at her right side. Without look at her or turning his head, he evidently told her to sit still eyes front and shut up. Which she did. My guess on the occasion: the question was "Why aren't all these foreign leaders applauding?"

Dana Mibank, pencil in hand, might have been wondering the same thing.

 

KUNINO

11:37 PM ET

May 26, 2011

The oddity of the week wasn't support of Israel

It was the Jumping Jack Flash display of it. This was so frequent and so energetic that it must have clouded the happy leapers' ability to make a level-headed appraisal of exactly what the Israeli prime minister was telling them.

Most people with a case to make ask for one thing: a respectful hearing. No reason Congress will ever give Mr Netanyahu one. Democratic parliamentarians were acting as though he were a Democratic US president, and Republicans as though he were George W Bush reborn. Their central relationships seem to have been primarily and perhaps solely with their Jewish voters back home. Nothing wrong with that -- if it was primarily. It was the adolescent cheer squad that clouded less parochial responsibilities.

 

David Rothkopf is the CEO and Editor-at-Large of Foreign Policy. His new book, "Power, Inc.: The Epic Rivalry Between Big Business and Government and the Reckoning that Lies Ahead" is due out from Farrar, Straus & Giroux on March 1.

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