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Written by Aluf Benn Aluf Benn
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Category: News News
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Published: 09 June 2009 09 June 2009
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Last Updated: 09 June 2009 09 June 2009
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Created: 09 June 2009 09 June 2009
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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu believes that U.S. President Barack
Obama wants a confrontation with Israel, based on Obama's speech in
Cairo last week, Netanyahu's confidants say.
In Netanyahu's opinion, the Americans believe an open controversy with
Israel would serve the Obama administration's main objective of
improving U.S. relations with the Arab world, the aides say.
In his speech, Obama called for a "new beginning" in relations between
America and Islam, and spoke at length about the Israeli-Arab conflict.
He demanded that Israel recognize the Palestinians' right to a state and freeze construction in the West Bank settlements.
Netanyahu objects to a complete suspension of construction beyond the
Green Line. This is Netanyahu's main bone of contention with the Obama
administration.
Netanyahu expects Obama to present his plan for peace in the Middle
East next month. He fears that the president will present positions
that will not be easy for Israel to accept, such as a demand to
withdraw to the lines of June 4, 1967. These lines, before the Six-Day
War, are at the basis of both the Arab peace initiative and previous
American presidents' peace forays.
By telephone yesterday, Netanyahu told Obama of his intention to give a
key policy speech on Sunday, in which he would outline his policy to
achieve peace and security. Obama promised to listen to the address
closely, and the two "agreed to maintain open and continuous contact,"
the Prime Minister's Bureau said.
Today Netanyahu is to meet the special U.S. envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell.
Political sources close to Netanyahu say that White House Chief of
Staff Rahm Emanuel and Obama's senior political consultant David
Axelrod are behind the clash between the administration and Israel.
Israel historically has depended on the White House to balance the
consensus of officials in the state and defense departments; this
consensus usually leans toward the Arab side.
Israeli officials say that under Obama, the White House has become the main problem in relations.
Israel is also having difficulty mustering the support of Congress and
the American Jewish community for its demand to continue expanding the
settlements.
Defense Minister Ehud Barak, who visited Washington last week, says the
Obama administration has no personal problem with Netanyahu and that
the Americans do not not seek to undermine the Israeli coalition and
topple the government.
Barak says Obama's positions are guided by strategic considerations -
he has undertaken to withdraw from Iraq and is striving to end the war
in Afghanistan and needs the moderate Arab states' support. This,
rather than "political persecution," is behind the administration's
attitude toward Israel, he says.