Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Relations between Obama, Netanyahu camps hit rock bottom

- By Josh Lederman

HONOLULU >> It took eight years of backbiting and pretending they got along for relations between President Barack Obama’s administra­tion and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to finally hit rock bottom.

Though they’ve clashed bitterly before, mostly notably over Iran, the two government­s seemed farther apart than ever after a speech Wednesday by Secretary of State John Kerry and last week’s United Nations resolution.

The key question for the Obama administra­tion, newly willing to air grievances with Israel on live television, is why now?

“We cannot, in good conscience, do nothing and say nothing when we see the hope of peace slipping away,” Kerry said in a speech that ran more than an hour.

Yet in just over three weeks, Obama will no longer be president, Kerry will no longer be secretary of State, and the U.S. will have a new leader under no obligation to embrace any of what Kerry said. Presidente­lect Donald Trump has assured Israel that things will be different after Jan. 20, when he’s to be inaugurate­d, and lamented how the Jewish state was “being treated very, very unfairly.”

Kerry took pains to voice America’s staunch commitment to Israel’s security and support for its future, and to detail U.S. complaints about Palestinia­n leadership and its failure to sufficient­ly deter violence against Israelis. He laid out a six-point framework for a potential peace deal that it will be up to the next U.S. government to try to enact, if it chooses to do so.

The White House has portrayed Obama’s decision to break with tradition by abstaining — rather than vetoing — a U.N. Security Council resolution declaring Israeli settlement­s illegal as a reaction forced by other countries that brought it up for a vote.

The White House has also acknowledg­ed that Obama had long considered the possibilit­y of taking some symbolic step before leaving office to leave his imprint on the debate. For much of the year, his staff pored over options that included a U.N. resolution outlining principles for a peace deal and a presidenti­al speech much like the one Kerry gave Wednesday. Yet there was reluctance to act before the U.S. election, given the way it would have thrust the Israeli-Palestinia­n issue into the campaign.

Kerry acknowledg­ed Trump appears to favor a different approach. Yet frustrated by years of Israeli actions he deemed counterpro­ductive for peace, Obama appeared to have decided it was better to make his administra­tion’s views known while still in office, even if it risked a blockbuste­r clash with America’s closest ally.

In his speech, Kerry tore into Israel for settlement­building, accusing Netanyahu of dragging Israel away from democracy. He defended the move to allow the U.N. vote, the spark that set off an extraordin­ary and deepening diplomatic spat between the U.S. and its closest Mideast ally.

“If the choice is one state, Israel can either be Jewish or democratic, it cannot be both, and it won’t ever really be at peace,” Kerry said

Shortly after, Netanyahu appeared on camera in Jerusalem and suggested he was done with the Obama administra­tion and ready to deal with Trump. The Israeli leader faulted Kerry for obsessing over settlement­s while paying mere “lip service” to Palestinia­n attacks and incitement of violence.

“Israelis do not need to be lectured about the importance of peace by foreign leaders,” Netanyahu said.

Trump wouldn’t say whether settlement­s should be reined in. But he told reporters Israel was being “treated very, very unfairly by a lot of different people.”

In a nod to Netanyahu’s concerns that Obama would take more parting shots, Kerry seemed to rule out the possibilit­y Obama would support more U.N. action or, even more controvers­ially, recognize statehood.

The U.S, the Palestinia­ns and most of the world oppose Israeli settlement constructi­on in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territorie­s captured by Israel in 1967 and claimed by the Palestinia­ns for an independen­t state. But Israel’s government argues previous constructi­on freezes didn’t advance peace and that the settlement­s — now home to 600,000 Israelis — must be resolved in direct talks Israelis-Palestinia­n talks.

While Israel’s Arab population has citizenshi­p rights, the roughly 2.5 million Palestinia­ns living in the occupied West Bank do not, and most in annexed east Jerusalem have residency rights but not citizenshi­p.

Kerry said a future deal would have to ensure secure borders for Israel and a Palestinia­n state formed in territorie­s Israel captured in 1967, with “mutually agreed, equivalent swaps.” He said both countries must fully recognize each other, ensure access to religious sites and relinquish other existing claims. Kerry also called for assistance for Palestinia­n refugees.

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