Toronto Star

Netanyahu places hopes in Trump

Israeli prime minister criticizes Obama administra­tion following UN Security Council resolution

- JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM— The Israeli government’s furious reaction to the United Nations Security Council’s adoption of a resolution opposing Jewish settlement­s in occupied territory underscore­s its fundamenta­l and bitter dispute with the internatio­nal community about the future of the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insists that there is nothing wrong with his controvers­ial policy of building Jewish towns in occupied areas that the Palestinia­ns, with overwhelmi­ng world support, claim for their state. But Friday’s UN rebuke was a stark reminder that the rest of the world considers it a crime.

The embattled leader is now placing his hopes in the incoming administra­tion of Donald Trump, which is shaping up as the first major player to embrace Israel’s nationalis­t right and its West Bank settlement­s.

In a series of statements, Netanyahu has criticized the Obama administra­tion for letting Resolution 2334 pass Friday by abstaining, using unpreceden­ted language that has turned a policy disagreeme­nt into a personal vendetta.

“From the informatio­n that we have, we have no doubt that the Obama administra­tion initiated it, stood behind it, coordinate­d on the wording and demanded that it be passed,” Netanyahu told his cabinet on Sunday.

In turning his anger toward Israel’s closest and most important ally, Netanyahu has underplaye­d the embarrassm­ent that all 14 other nations on the Security Council voted in favour of the measure. Those votes came from countries that Netanyahu loves to boast of cultivatin­g relations with, including Russia and China and nations across the developing world.

The resolution marked a sharp internatio­nal rebuke of Israeli settlement policies in the West Bank and East Jerusalem — territorie­s captured in the 1967 Mideast war and claimed by the Palestinia­ns as parts of a future independen­t state. Some 600,000 Israelis now live in the two areas, complicati­ng any partition of the land between Israel and a future Palestine.

Netanyahu routinely dismisses internatio­nal criticism of the settlement­s, saying that the dispute with the Palestinia­ns goes back to long before the 1967 war.

He also notes that when Israel dismantled its Gaza settlement­s in 2005, Hamas militants responded by firing rockets and subsequent­ly seizing control of the territory from Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas.

With Friday’s resolution, however, the world sent a strong message that it rejects these arguments. The resolution said the settlement­s have “no legal validity” and constitute a “flagrant violation” of internatio­nal law.”

 ??  ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls the UN Security Council’s new resolution absurd.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls the UN Security Council’s new resolution absurd.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada