The Jerusalem Post

Biden: ‘Occupation’ is human rights crisis

IfNotNow activists ambush Democratic candidates in New Hampshire

- • By MARCY OSTER

Democratic presidenti­al front runner and former vice president Joe Biden told a member of the IfNotNow Jewish movement that the “occupation is a human rights crisis,” and called for a two-state solution.

He was one of three major Democratic presidenti­al candidates who were ambushed by activists from the IfNotNow organizati­on over the weekend. The other two candidates are South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and Mew Jersey Sen. Corey Booker.

At a Biden campaign event in Dover, New Hampshire, on Friday, IfNotNow fellow Elias Newman asked the candidate if he were to be elected would he pressure Israel to end the occupation.

“I think the settlement­s are unnecessar­y,” Biden first responded, adding that “the only answer is a two-state solution” and “the Palestinia­ns have to step up too, and be prepared to stop the hate... so it’s a two-way street.”

When asked if he would “pressure Israel to end the occupation as president,” Biden responded: “The answer, do you know anything about my record?” When Newman responded in the affirmativ­e, Biden said “then you know I have, well you know I have…”

Newman said in a statement that Biden has taken “a step in the right direction by calling Israel’s military occupation a ‘real’ and ‘significan­t problem’; this is the bare minimum we should expect from Democratic hopefuls.”

He said that Biden, as vice president under Barack Obama, “played a key role in giving the Netanyahu government a free pass to continue settlement expansion, launch assaults on Gaza that killed thousands of Palestinia­n civilians, and lay the groundwork to annex the West Bank.”

In Laconia, New Hampshire, on Friday, Buttigieg told IfNotNow fellow Erin Sandler that “the occupation must end.” He added that there is starting to be an “awareness that in the same way that you can be pro-America without that meaning you got to support our president, you can care about Israel’s future and believe in the US relationsh­ip and alliance with Israel without being on board with right-wing policies by the Netanyahu government, which is now walking away from peace in a way that I think will harm the Israeli people, the Palestinia­n people, and in the long run, the American people.”

In a tweet posted on Sunday, IfNotNow said one of its fellows on Saturday asked Cory Booker the same occupation question, and that he got “visibly frustrated.”

“If that’s your issue I would understand if you want to support somebody else,” the group said he responded. The series of tweets also noted that he refused to use the term occupation.

“Looks like he’s choosing @AIPAC over the grassroots,” the tweet also said.

The group – which does not take a position on whether Israel should exist as a Jewish state – announced last month that it hired six full-time fellows to live in New Hampshire and to spend the summer publicly confrontin­g candidates during their events.

The group has raised its profile over the last year by protesting Birthright in a variety of ways, including walking off of its free 10-day trips to Israel. ( JTA)

 ?? (Brian Snyder/Reuters) ?? DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTI­AL candidate and former vice president Joe Biden speaks at a campaign stop in Dover, New Hampshire, on Sunday.
(Brian Snyder/Reuters) DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTI­AL candidate and former vice president Joe Biden speaks at a campaign stop in Dover, New Hampshire, on Sunday.

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