Yesterday morning, the New York Daily News ran a curious headline on a story about President Obama’s limo having mechanical difficulties in Israel. “Will Obama’s historic Israel trip be overshadowed by gaffes?” the headline read.
I’m not sure what “gaffes” and car breakdowns have to do with one another, but it seemed as if some in media were prepared to write off the president’s time in Israel as a missed political opportunity.
As of this morning, no one seems to be saying that anymore. Consider this Haaretz editorial.
President Barack Obama penetrated the hearts of the Israeli people yesterday with his moving and compelling speech at the International Convention Center in Jerusalem.
His messages, which he directed at the young audience in the hall — and to hundreds of thousands of households in Israel and the Palestinian Authority — are much more significant than his polite per-protocol remarks at other events with politicians, primarily with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. […]
Obama’s goal in coming to Israel has been achieved: He won Israeli hearts and gave Israelis a sense of security, in the hope that now they will take charge and push the leadership toward a peace agreement with the Palestinians. Let us hope that Obama’s call falls on attentive ears.
To be sure, Haaretz is not exactly Israel’s equivalent of Fox News, but the larger point is that those who were a little too eager to write off Obama’s trip probably should have waited another day — his Jerusalem speech resonated in Israel in ways that were arguably hard to predict.
So, what’s next?









