Obama Still Not Fooling Anyone on Israel

When foreign policy “realists,” pseudo-realists, and leftists claim that the pro-Israel establishment is preventing an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal, their argument fails to account for one aspect of recent Mideast history: During the administrations of American presidents seen as favoring Israel, the Jewish state’s leaders made serious offers for a final-status agreement.

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Obama Still Not Fooling Anyone on Israel

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Infrastructure Hypocrisy in NYC

Americans are not wrong to worry about their nation’s aging infrastructure. Those crumbling “roads and bridges” that President Barack Obama has been going on about for precisely as long as Republicans have been in control of the appropriations process is, however, only half the story – and the most visible half, at that. Underground, another tale of decrepit infrastructure has been circulating, particularly among New York City residents, for decades. It is the story of near apocalyptic disaster; one which has been in the making for nearly a century. There’s a reason why you do not hear nearly as many national Democrats pointing politically charged fingers in the direction of their fellow party members in the highest echelons of city government. Theirs is a mess the national party would much rather ignore.

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Note to Donald: Mexico Won’t Fold

Give Donald Trump some credit. Several months into his presidential campaign, he finally gave us something in writing that told how he would carry off his signature campaign promise. If you wanted to know how he would build a wall on America’s southern border and make Mexico pay for it, all you need do is to read the two-page memo he gave yesterday to the Washington Post. The document isn’t exactly a definitive paper but it does flesh out his ideas that go beyond the slogan or even the promise of a trade war with Mexico that Trump has floated in Republican debates to explain how he’ll make this happen. But a closer look at his proposal shows that what Trump is suggesting is both legally dubious as well as utterly impractical. It also shows again how little he knows about history and what motivates nations. In the unlikely event that it were ever implemented, it would be a catastrophe for both the U.S. and Mexico illustrating that even billionaire reality starts turned presidential candidates are not immune to the laws of unintended consequences.

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America’s Secret Boots on the Ground

Ever since President Obama sent U.S. forces back to Iraq in August, 2014 to fight ISIS — a terrorist group that grew up in the vacuum that he left by pulling U.S. troops out at the end of 2011 — the president has repeatedly promised that U.S. troops would not go into combat. By last fall, he had uttered some variation of the phrase “no boots on the ground” at least sixteen times. On September 10, 2014, for example, he said: “I want the American people to understand how this effort will be different from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It will not involve American combat troops fighting on foreign soil.”

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Is Cruz More Than Just Non-Trump?

Donald Trump didn’t surface in the wake of his drubbing last night in Wisconsin. But last night and then this morning, Trump did send forth campaign aides to trash the man who beat him. The attacks, which attempted to depict Cruz as “worse than a puppet” and a “Trojan horse” being used by “the Bush people” to steal the nomination from Trump didn’t do much to lessen the sting of what turned out to be a landslide loss for the frontrunner. But this is more than just the usual bad loser routine for Trump. The irony here is that Trump’s new line of attack on Cruz shows us how far the Texas senator has come. He entered the presidential race as a niche candidate who seemed unable to appeal to voters outside of the Tea Party or evangelicals. But after his latest victory, the question is whether GOP voters are starting to think of Cruz as something more than just the lesser of evils as the leading non-Trump in the race. The outcome of the GOP contest will probably hinge on whether Cruz can transcend what we all assumed to be his limitations and give Trump a real run for his money in the remaining primaries.

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The Trump Campaign’s Identity Crisis

As the unsettled political earth shifts again under the nation’s feet, the latest iteration of the dominant conventional wisdom – that nothing Donald Trump could say or do would compel his core voters to reassess their support – is under threat. This is all rather jarring. The commentary class only recently, and under protest, accepted this unnerving truth despite the fact that it contradicted virtually every lesson gleaned from the study of decades of electoral politics. This disorienting state of affairs is, however, nothing compared to the befuddling behavior in which the Trump campaign is engaged. There are not merely “two different Donald Trumps,” as the celebrity candidate’s hapless surrogate Ben Carson famously said; there are two different Trump campaigns. Both exist simultaneously and in a state of conflict, with one continuously undermining the other.

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