NOVANEWS
by crescentandcross
Today I tried to substitute a snarky tweet (“Sarah Palin thinks Israeli settlements are Jewish alimony payments”) for an entire blog post about Former Half-Gov Jewette McSeeMyStar, but I couldn’t hold out. I succumbed. I’m weak.
She is so transparent, such an embarrassment, what could I do but share? Here’s how Sarah proves her foreign policy cred and expresses her solidarity with Israel, via the Daily Mail:
[S]he was pictured at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, her white jacket open and revealing her necklace. […]
In 2008 she was also reportedly pictured wearing a Star of David
necklace.
As for that 2012 issue:
On her party she said: ‘Too often Republicans have the fighting instinct of sheep — they just sit back and take it.
‘I’m pretty independent and some players in the Republican hierarchy don’t like that.
‘I’m so busy I don’t have the time to play some of the games these guys want to play.’
She’s right, you know. She clearly doesn’t have time to play those petty games. We know that because she barely had time to wear the Star of David more than twice in three years, and only during election season.
http://thepoliticalcarnival.net/2011/03/21/photoh-sarah-palin-israels-…
In tour of Jerusalem, Sarah Palin tries to build her foreign policy credentials
Palin’s visit follows trips by several other Republican presidential hopefuls.
JERUSALEM — Dubbing her first-ever visit to Israel “private” might have been a smart move by Sarah Palin.
It enabled her to avoid being pressed for policy pronouncements on the Middle East upheavals swirling around the Jewish state and the nuances of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, while allowing her to project on her own terms that she is shoring up her foreign policy credentials.
The visit to Israel has heightened the sense that the former Alaska governor is building herself up as a potential 2012 presidential candidate.
The two-day Israel trip that started Sunday afternoon came after Palin participated in a high-profile event organized by India Today magazine in New Delhi in which she gave the keynote address. She was then questioned on foreign policy issues, singling out the falling of nuclear weapons into the hands of terrorists as the biggest threat to global security.
After praying at the Western Wall and while visiting Jerusalem’s Old City, the former vice presidential candidate gushed like a tourist seeing the sites for the first time.
“Israel is absolutely beautiful and it is overwhelming to see and touch the cornerstones of our faith and I am so grateful to be here,” she said. “I’m very thankful to know the Israeli and American link will grow in strength as we seek peace along with you.”
In the view of Hebrew University professor of American studies David Ricci, Palin aimed to ”show she’s taking an interest in foreign affairs, an area she was weak in two years ago as a vice presidential candidate. The idea is to look around, be photographed at some interesting places and then go back to her constituents and say she knows more than she did before.”
And even though the Israel visit was supposedly private, she was to confer over dinner Monday night with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “discuss the key issues facing his country, our ally Israel.”
She was shown around by Danny Danon, a member of the Knesset from Netanyahu’s Likud party who is an ardent supporter of Jewish settlement in the West Bank and the nemesis of the Israeli left, which has accused him of having McCarthyist ideas, something he has denied.
Some analysts perceived using Danon as a guide as a deliberate statement.
Some analysts perceived using Danon as a guide as a deliberate statement.