Dorothy Online Newsletter
NOVANEWS
Dear All,
Had intended to spend the day at the Corrie’s trial over Rachel’s death today, but fate had other plans. Oh we did head for Haifa, but by train. I don’t know what the reason was, but the trains were extra slow, and also forced us to detrain and change trains more than usual. Someone said that there was a slow-down strike going on. But your guess is as good as mine. To make a long story short, a normally 1 hour trip took over 3 hours. By the time we arrived the questioning of what was to have been the first of two witnesses was almost over. The 2nd witness did not turn up (he is abroad), so that we were there for only a little over one hour. The final session has been postponed till July 10th at noon. Today’s session was the testimony of the IOF spokesperson (a female) at the time that Rachel was run over by the bulldozer. I can only hope that the impression that the judge makes is wrong, and that he will be fair and see justice done, that his verdict will be that the Corries have proved their case that Rachel did not merely die or was just killed, but was intentionally killed–in other words, murdered. We shall see.
3 items below, all relating to Obama’s speeches (Thursday’s and today’s), albeit the 1st one uses (rather than reacts to) the speech to make the point that today’s borders are indefensible. Am so glad that someone puts the cards on the table and states facts—that with today’s missiles, bombers, and other like equipment, borders are irrelevant to security.
The 2nd and 3rd items take very different views of today’s speech. The 2nd item was forwarded by Sabeel, which appears to be quite unhappy with the main points that Obama made. I must acknowledge that I was too. I especially felt my ire mounting when at the first part of the speech, in trying to show how much America cared for Israel and backed it up he said that in response to the Goldstone report, he (Obama) had stated that ‘Israel has a right to defend itself.’
I remember well hearing that unfortunate statement from the major Western powers just after the end of Israel’s Cast Lead attack on Gaza. Who, after all, was doing the attacking, destroying, and killing with heavy equipment? Surely not the 300 o4 400 children who were killed. Who, dear friends, needed defending?
The third report holds that “Obama Challenges Israel to Make Hard Choices Needed for Peace.” Maybe I had my ears clogged. I heard no hard choices. I did hear that Israel will continue to be armed, Palestine not (why not both be unarmed?), and that the 1967 borders are amendable because things have happened since 1967. What therefore happens to the 1967 green line that Obama seemed on Thursday to insist would be the basis? It appears to have disappeared!
Some people think that when Obama is re-elected next year, he will then come down much harder on Israel. Wish I could believe that. After all, had he used the financial difficulties that the US has had the past few years as a starting point, he could have insisted that the US had no money to support Israel with $3billion annually for the next 10 years in military aid. He might not have gotten the AIPAC vote, but would surely have won the election.
Am still hoping for better times.
Dorothy
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1. Haaretz Editorial,
May 22, 2011
Today’s borders are the ‘indefensible’ ones
Netanyahu’s decision to have Israel clash with Obama is not only a dead end, it could remove the only protective wall Israel has left and sacrifice the country’s future on the altar of hollow ideology and unbridled nationalism.
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/today-s-borders-are-the-indefensible-ones-1.363224
Haaretz Editorial
Lots of high-sounding words were uttered over the weekend. There was U.S. President Barack Obama’s speech, in which he welcomed the civil revolutions in the Middle East and sketched the outlines of the best diplomatic plan to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Then came the unabashed longing of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for peace on his terms. But the cascades of verbiage did not produce concord between Israel and the United States – to the point where it’s hard to decide which disagreement is greater, between Israel and the Palestinians or between Israel and the United States.
There is no doubt which is more dangerous for Israel. Netanyahu’s decision to have Israel clash with Obama is not only a dead end, it could remove the only protective wall Israel has left and sacrifice the country’s future on the altar of hollow ideology and unbridled nationalism.
Netanyahu is lying to the Israeli public and leading the U.S. administration astray when he portrays Israel’s current borders as defensible. The occupation of the West Bank, the planting of more settlements on the rocky hilltops, control of the Jordan Valley or the construction of thousands of homes in East Jerusalem do not remove the Iranian threat, prevent the firing of Qassam rockets or end Hezbollah’s willingness to fire missiles at Israel.
Borders themselves do not guarantee security. But borders that are recognized by the international community give a country the legitimacy to defend its sovereignty. Israel has no such borders, and more and more countries are finding it difficult to defend Israel’s position, which seeks to persuade others that occupation is a means of defense.
The real danger for Israel is not only the crisis in relations with the United States and most of Europe, it’s the deception Israel is trying to market to the Israeli public. According to that deception, a strong stand based only on nationalist slogans can replace a diplomatic solution; all that’s needed to survive Obama’s term with the current borders are well-crafted speeches and the right amount of manipulation. This strategy turns Netanyahu into a real threat to Israel’s security and future.
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2. Sabeel 21May11
« “I Got Vision and the Rest of the World Wears Bifocals” Obama Speech Mired in Zionist Rhetoric
http://wallwritings.wordpress.com/2011/05/21/obama-speech-mired-in-zionist-rhetoric/
By James M. Wall
Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu returned to Washington this weekend for his annual love fest with AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, which is holding its annual Policy Committee meeting Sunday through Tuesday.
President Obama followed up his speech to his Arab Spring presentation at the State Department, Thursday, by reiterating his comments on Israel at the AIPAC conference Sunday morning.
The President’s speech Thursday provided an overview of the changes now sweeping the Arab world. Late in that address, Obama turned to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Unfortunately, in linking the changes emerging from the Arab Spring to the future of the Palestinian Territory, the President was playing with a very bad hand.
He is a man locked into the rhetoric of the past, honed over decades by Israeli propagandists and Israel’s many friends in the US.
The President is a terrific orator. But his rhetoric in this speech needs a careful exegesis to bring out its blatant contradictions.
It is not easy to please Israel’s many friends in the US while attempting, rather desperately, to balance the suffering and the hopes of Israel and the Palestinians. He did not succeed.
Consider his first reference to the suffering of the two “sides”:
For Israelis, it has meant living with the fear that their children could get blown up on a bus or by rockets fired at their homes, as well as the pain of knowing that other children in the region are taught to hate them.
For Palestinians, it has meant suffering the humiliation of occupation, and never living in a nation of their own.
Note carefully how he illustrates the “two sides”, trying, unsuccessfully to balance the suffering of an occupier with that of the occupied. The Israeli suffering he cites is that of children who live in fear of dying. His example of Palestinian suffering is more abstract, the humiliation of occupation and the quest for nationhood.
The bombing of Israeli buses is from the past; the suffering of Palestinian children, which the president does not specifically mention, is existential, ongoing, constant and a daily threat with no end in sight.
President Obama said he would talk about “security and territory”. He would “put off” the sensitive issues of refugees and Jerusalem, the same sensitive issues negotiators have “put off” for decades.
President Obama also dutifully followed the Zionist line that the “two parties” should negotiate between themselves. Any involvement by the United Nations is merely symbolic and is harmful to Israel. Here is his specific complaint:
For the Palestinians, efforts to delegitimize Israel will end in failure. Symbolic actions to isolate Israel at the United Nations in September won’t create an independent state. Palestinian leaders will not achieve peace or prosperity if Hamas insists on a path of terror and rejection. And Palestinians will never realize their independence by denying the right of Israel to exist.
“Delegitimize Israel”? How does recognizing a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders “delegitimize Israel?”
And what is “symbolic” about the UN recognizing a Palestinian state? It is not “symbolic”; it is a legitimizing action on behalf of the Palestinians just as much as the UN’s creation of the Israeli state in 1948 was a legitimizing action.
The President continued:
Palestinian leaders will not achieve peace or prosperity if Hamas insists on a path of terror and rejection. And Palestinians will never realize their independence by denying the right of Israel to exist.
The President was talking about UN recognition before he moved quickly into the issue of Hamas which he insists on calling a “terrorist” organization.
The trouble with tossing in the “right to exist” phrase, is that Obama ignores the fact that nations do not have the “right to exist”. They simply exist within borders that their neighbors accept as legitimate because of historical circumstances. There are no “rights” involved.
It is embarrassing for our president to allow himself to be dragged into using the Zionist “right to exist” shibboleth (See Judges 12 for the term’s origins.).
And while we are reflecting on President Obama’s embrace of traditional Israeli-American propaganda language, these two short sentences do not sound like Obama; rather, they sound like something lifted from a White House manual on “How to Speak Israeli”:
As for Israel, our friendship is rooted deeply in a shared history and shared values. Our commitment to Israel’s security is unshakeable.
What exactly is this “shared history” and what exactly are our “shared values”?
Modern Israel’s history begins in 1948. Aside from pushing the UN to recognize the state, and selling it arms, what have we shared? OK, we did share the pragmatic belief that Israel was our bulwark against communism in the Middle East.
In his report on the White House Friday meeting between Netanyahu and Obama, Jewish blogger Richard Silverstein includes an incisive reminder of what “shared values” now mean to American politicians, from the far religious right to the Obama White House:
Obama again, in remarks after the two-hour meeting, noted that Israel was a “Jewish state” making no reference to the fact that it was also composed of a significant minority of non-Jewish citizens. It would be as if a foreign leader congratulated the US. for being a Christian nation. It sure would make John Hagee happy.
When Obama bragged, in his speech, about the US killing of Osama bin Laden, he was providing a further example of the values that Israel and the US share. Our Navy Seals killed an unarmed man who could have been sedated and delivered to the American judicial system. Was that option even considered in advance?
A trial for Osama bin Laden would have been more consistent with our American values than the practice of assassinating enemies, a standard we learned from our Israeli friends, who have long killed their opponents by assassinations.
In his speech, Obama asserts that “every state has the right to self-defense”.
Israel must be able to defend itself – by itself – against any threat. Provisions must also be robust enough to prevent a resurgence of terrorism; to stop the infiltration of weapons; and to provide effective border security.
Makes sense. No nation wants to be without the ability to defend its own citizens. But, then Obama adds this remarkable exception:
The full and phased withdrawal of Israeli military forces should be coordinated with the assumption of Palestinian security responsibility in a sovereign, non-militarized state.
This is a convoluted sentence that could be construed to suggest that when Israel withdraws its military forces from the Occupied Palestinian Territory, it will continue to provide “security” for the new sovereign state of Palestine, which will not have its own military forces.
Or, does the sentence say that Palestine will be left with no defenses? Difficult to tell from this sentence in what was reported to be some frantic, last minute speech revisions.
Whatever it was intended to say, the defense exception for Palestine is a stunningly ugly example of Obama’s embrace of Zionist–as in, whatever is best for Israel–values.
Three days before Obama’s speech, President Mahmoud Abbas wrote a guest column for the New York Times. He began with a story:
Sixty-three years ago, a 13-year-old Palestinian boy was forced to leave his home in the Galilean city of Safed and flee with his family to Syria. He took up shelter in a canvas tent provided to all the arriving refugees.
Though he and his family wished for decades to return to their home and homeland, they were denied that most basic of human rights. That child’s story, like that of so many other Palestinians, is mine.
President Abbas linked his personal story to the decision of his government to request international recognition as a state along the 1967 borders. That request will also ask that the new state of Palestine be “admitted as a full member of the United Nations.” Abbas added:
Many are questioning what value there is to such recognition while the Israeli occupation continues. Others have accused us of imperiling the peace process. We believe, however, that there is tremendous value for all Palestinians — those living in the homeland, in exile and under occupation. . . .
Palestine’s admission to the United Nations would pave the way for the internationalization of the conflict as a legal matter, not only a political one. It would also pave the way for us to pursue claims against Israel at the United Nations, human rights treaty bodies and the International Court of Justice.
Our quest for recognition as a state should not be seen as a stunt; too many of our men and women have been lost for us to engage in such political theater.
We go to the United Nations now to secure the right to live free in the remaining 22 percent of our historic homeland because we have been negotiating with the State of Israel for 20 years without coming any closer to realizing a state of our own.
The Barack Obama who said in his May 19 speech that the US “will oppose an attempt by any group to restrict the rights of others”, is not the Barack Obama who dismisses the Palestinian appeal to the UN General Assembly as merely a “symbolic action” designed “to isolate Israel”.
The Obama speech was both a missed opportunity and a sad failure.
The picture of the Palestinian woman with a flag at the top of this page, and the picture of Mahmoud Abbas, are from Intifada Palestine. [to see the pictures use the link. D]
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3. NYTimes,
May 22, 2011
Obama Challenges Israel to Make Hard Choices Needed for Peace
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/23/world/middleeast/23aipac.html?_r=1&ref=global-home
By HELENE COOPER
WASHINGTON — President Obama, speaking on Sunday to the nation’s foremost pro-Israel lobbying group, repeated his call for Palestinian statehood based on Israel’s pre-1967 borders adjusted for land swaps, issuing a challenge to the Israeli government to “make the hard choices that are necessary to protect a Jewish and democratic state for which so many generations have sacrificed.”
In his remarks to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the president did not walk back at all from his speech on Thursday which had infuriated Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. Rather, the president took indirect aim at Mr. Netanyahu, first by repeating what the Israeli prime minister so objected to — the phrase pre-1967 borders — and then by challenging those whom he said had “misrepresented” his position.
“Let me repeat what I said on Thursday,” Mr. Obama said. “I said that the United States believes that negotiations should result in two states, with permanent Palestinian borders with Israel, Jordan, and Egypt, and permanent Israeli borders with Palestine. The borders of Israel and Palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps, so that secure and recognized borders are established for both states.”
The president emphasized the “mutually agreed swaps,” then went into an elaboration of what he believes that means. Mr. Netanyahu, in his critique of Mr. Obama’s remarks, had ignored the “mutually agreed swaps” part of the president’s proposal.
“Since my position has been misrepresented several times, let me reaffirm what “1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps” means,” Mr. Obama said. “By definition, it means that the parties themselves — Israelis and Palestinians — will negotiate a border that is different than the one that existed on June 4, 1967. It is a well known formula to all who have worked on this issue for a generation. It allows the parties themselves to account for the changes that have taken place over the last 44 years.”
The audience, which had been quiet, cheered, although the cheers were far more muted than the standing ovation they had given at other points of Mr. Obama’s speech, like when he talked about Iran and when he reiterated that his opposition to a looming United Nations vote on Palestinian statehood.
“I know very well that the easy thing to do, particularly for a president preparing for re-election, is to avoid any controversy,” Mr. Obama said. “I don’t need Rahm” — __former chief of staff Rahm Emanuel — “to tell me that.”
But, Mr. Obama added, “as I said to Prime Minister Netanyahu, I believe that the current situation in the Middle East does not allow for procrastination. I also believe that real friends talk openly and honestly with one another.”
It was a quietly delivered speech that lasted 20 minutes, and at the end, the packed hall of at the Washington Convention Center stood up for Mr. Obama and clapped — some even cheered. There were no boos or hisses, as some of the president’s allies had feared.
Brian Knowlton contributed reporting.
Documentary on Zio-Nazi occupation of Palestine
NOVANEWS
This is worth watching- documentary on the occupation of Palestine. Please click on the link to watch
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxZzcdadv6A
Occupation 101 | Full Documentary
IWOP1
CRAP POLICE SERVICE UNDER CON-DOM'S GOVERNMENT
NOVANEWS
Subject: Parking problems
Hello Alex – you will recall I emailed you sometime ago regarding the possibility of your police officers having a stronger presence around the school at peak times like 8.45am and 3.30pm.
Like me, a few parents are really worried about the safety of our pupils. They are talking about putting a petition together to take to the Police Head office and to present to the local politicians. I don’t want them to do that. Hence I am asking you if you can please do your absolute best to send officers round Heath Mount School – to Wenman Road entrance as well as the Mary Street entrance on a regular basis.
I appreciate that you have so many bigger and worse issue to deal with but we are looking at prevention rather than wating for an accident to happen before we deal with it.
Many thanks
From: Alex Gibson <a.j.gibson@west-midlands.pnn.police.uk>
Sent: Fri, 20 May 2011
Subject: RE: Parking problems
Thank you for you e-mail. Unfortunately West Midlands Police has had another restructure, which has affected us locally. We now have an even smaller neighbourhood team, which is stretched across Balsall Heath and Sparkbrook up towards the Stratford Road. On most shifts there are at most 4 Police officers, and 4 PCSO’s on duty, so we have to prioritise our patrols. I will try my best to get down to the school on earlies, however this will not always be possible.
I will make officers on my team aware, and hopefully we will be able to cover the school on earlies.
Kind Regards
PC Alex Gibson
Please let me have your response.
The Rich, The Powerful And Diplomatic Immunity.
The Guardian has a good piece on the misuse of diplomatic immunity and the terrible treatment of domestic workers by diplomats and those in positions of power:
“Still, a recent case of domestic abuse in a diplomatic household set an encouraging precedent. Vishranthamma Swarna, a maid to former Kuwaiti UN diplomat Badar Al-Awadi, claimed to have suffered sustained mistreatment, including rape, when she was not cooking, cleaning and caring for the diplomat’s children in New York. Swarna was isolated: she spoke no English and was banned by her employer from leaving the house. She also inhabited a legal black hole: since her employer, who brought her in on a special visa, had diplomatic immunity, he could not be prosecuted in the United States for his actions.
With help from the ACLU, Swarna was able to take her case to the federal district court of New York, where the judge ruled that her work did not have a “direct … benefit to diplomatic functions” and that Al-Awadi could subsequently not be protected from prosecution under the Vienna conventions (pdf). The decision means that a diplomat can now be held liable for mistreating a domestic worker, but not for sexually abusing a secretary or intern, whose work is arguably vital to the embassy or consulate’s work. It remains to be seen whether victims like Swarna will begin speak up. But even then, their alleged abusers can conveniently relocate. Al-Awadi has since moved to Paris.
Women who work at international organisations also face sex discrimination and harassment, and the more highly ranked their harassers, the less likely they are to get justice.
In 2004, Ruud Lubbers, the high commissioner for human rights, reportedly grabbed Cynthia Brzak, an American employee, and pressed his groin against her buttocks in full view of other UNHCR staff. Brzak and many other female employees report that it is normal to be treated in such a way at the UN and other international organisations. But since filing a complaint is seen as a career-killer, most sexual harassment incidents go unreported. Victims have very little legal recourse, and must go through the UN’s complex internal justice system. Brzak pressed charges because she was tired of the permissive culture. “I just wanted a message sent that you cannot keep jumping on women at three in the afternoon,” she says today.” “
A. Loewenstein Online Newsletter
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Obama given Zionist history lesson at White House
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John Mearsheimer on why Obama failed to address Palestinian rights
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Netanyahu in denial about his country’s occupying future
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America and Israel on real collision course? Hardly
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Of course Arabs see that Obama shows too much love for Israel
Obama given Zionist history lesson at White HousePosted: 21 May 2011 |
John Mearsheimer on why Obama failed to address Palestinian rightsPosted: 21 May 2011He’s right:
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Netanyahu in denial about his country’s occupying futurePosted: 21 May 2011 |
America and Israel on real collision course? HardlyPosted: 21 May 2011As if:
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Of course Arabs see that Obama shows too much love for IsraelPosted: 21 May 2011 |
NHS “listening exercise"
NOVANEWS
“When we tell him his plans aren’t working, he doesn’t seem to want to hear whatwe’re saying.”Dr Hamish Meldrum, Chair of the British Medical Association, May 2011
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Nazi Settlers Attacks Palestinian's
NOVANEWS
Video: Palestinian testimonies about settler attack in Tuba |
Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) has released a video of Palestinian testimonies about the recent settler invasion in the village of Tuba. On 16 May, shortly before midnight, Israeli settlers invaded Tuba, damaged property, and stole and injured several sheep belonging to the Ali Awwad family.
Members of the Ali Awwad family reported that they counted seven masked settlers, who entered the village throwing rocks with slingshots. Besides stealing seven sheep, the settlers beat the sheep and injured several, including one which lost an eye. Two of the sheep were so badly injured that the family had to slaughter them the next morning. In addition, the settlers overturned three large water tanks, damaged fences and a goat pen, punctured a storage tent and three sacks of yogurt, and destroyed the ventilation pipe of an outhouse.
Although the family called the Israeli police the night of the attack, the police did not come to Tuba until two days later. Tuba residents saw Israeli soldiers near the village immediately following the settler invasion. But when the Palestinians tried to speak with the soldiers, the soldiers were not able to communicate in Arabic and left the village.
Christian Peacemaker Teams and Operation Dove have maintained an international presence in At-Tuwani and the South Hebron Hills since 2004.
‘Obama knows Zio-Nazi's won’t retreat to ’67 lines’
American officials tell Washington Post US president opted to shift negotiations’ starting point, but is fully aware that end point might remain unchanged
Sources in the American administration said that despite the comments made during his speech, US President Barack Obama – just like his predecessor George W. Bush – knows that Israel will not withdraw to 1967 lines as part of any peace agreement signed between the Jewish State and the Palestinians.
Quoted by the Washington Post, the officials noted that Obama opted to apply pressure and shift the starting point of the negotiations in order to pull them out of a standstill – even though he fully realizes that the final result, if and when an agreement is signed, will probably remain the same.
Obama’s statement, saying that the 1967 lines must be the basis for negotiations between the sides, became the main bone of contention during the Friday meeting between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the American president.
Netanyahu bluntly told Obama that Israel will not retreat to pre-Six-Day War lines because they are ‘indefensible,’ adding that demographic changes along the border will not allow full withdrawal.
Following their White House meeting, which lasted much longer than scheduled, Obama made no further comment on his previous statement, only saying that the main disagreements with Israel remain over how to achieve peace in the Middle East.
Meanwhile, Fatah Central Committee member Nabil Shaath said the Palestinians will move ahead with seeking UN recognition of a state in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, despite Obama’s warning that it would be pointless.
Shaath said late Friday that Netanyahu’s statements make it clear the Israeli leader is not a partner for peace. Shaath says that “we will escalate our diplomatic effort to get recognition” of a state.
Netanyahu, Obama share little chemistry’
NOVANEWS
Tense White House meeting between US president, Israeli PM makes headlines in British, American newspapers. Wall Street Journal calls leaders’ photo-op ‘most undiplomatic moments of international diplomacy ever offered for cameras’
The tension during US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s White House meeting on Friday was the focus of American and British media reports, after Netanyahu slammed Obama’s speech, saying Israel will not retreat to the 1967 lines because they are “indefensible.”
Under the title “Netanyahu’s outrage at Obama’s Middle East speech is synthetic,” British newspaper the Guardian’s Middle East Editor Ian Black claimed that Obama’s statement about Israel’s need to return to 1967 lines “is more about Israeli anxieties and spin than a substantive US policy shift.
Sources privy to political atmosphere prior to US president’s Mideast policy speech say tension between White House, Jerusalem hit new high
“American presidents from Bill Clinton onwards have used identical language. It was the basis for talks between Clinton, Ehud Barak and Yasser Arafat at Camp David in 2000. It also formed the basis for George W. Bush’s talks with Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert,” he wrote.
Black noted that “Netanyahu’s outraged rejection of Obama’s words thus appeared both tactical and synthetic.
“The accompanying notion of ‘mutually agreed swaps’ allows in principle for Israel to retain settlement blocs it has built illegally in the West Bank and around east Jerusalem,” he wrote, adding that “the row reflects Netanyahu’s dislike of Obama as well as mounting alarm that Israel’s diplomatic position is being eroded by a combination of international impatience and the changes of the ‘Arab spring’ – especially in an Egypt now pursuing a less pro-American foreign policy.”
Awkward moments. Netanyahu, Obama at White House (Photo: Reuters)
Black concluded that “Netanyahu’s anger would have been genuine had Obama insisted simply on a return to the 1967 borders. That would have been a major shift in US policy.”
British newspaper the Independent took a harsher stance against Israel, writing that the disagreements between the US president and the Israeli prime minister were too visible to conceal.
Under the title “Netanyahu shoots down Obama’s peace plan at the White House,” the paper’s US Editor David Usborne wrote, “Any artifice of unity between the leaders evaporated when they came before the television cameras at the White House to report on their talks.
“It has become clear that the men share little personal chemistry, the right-wing Israeli premier more at home with the Republican Party, which is generally more supportive of Israel’s demands vis-à-vis the Palestinians.”
The American press also commented on the strained atmosphere during the leaders’ on-camera talk. The Wall Street Journal stated that “Netanyahu delivered a rare public rebuke of President Barack Obama at the White House, declaring that Israel would never accept the terms of his proposal to resume peace talks with the Palestinians.
“Friday’s 15-minute Oval Office photo-op with President Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu might go down as one of the most undiplomatic moments of international diplomacy ever offered for the cameras,” the newspaper added.
U.S. official to Haaretz: Netanyahu focus on 1967 borders missing the point
NOVANEWS
Senior U.S. official says Netanyahu’s reaction to Obama’s Mideast speech may lead to a situation in which 187 countries vote for the recognition of a Palestinian state at the General Assembly and two oppose.
Haaretz
A senior U.S. State Department official told Haaretz Friday that U.S. President Barack Obama is disappointed with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s reaction to his Middle East policy, faulting Netanyahu for focusing on the issue of 1967 borders instead of looking at his policy as a whole and especially the alternative he proposed to the unilateral declaration of the Palestinian state at the United Nations.
“There were plenty of things in support of Israel,” the official told Haaretz, citing Obama’s wariness of the recent reconciliation of Hamas and Fatah, his condemnation of terror perpetrated by Hamas and his call for Palestinians to halt unilateral steps toward recognition. The official added that Obama recognized Israel as a Jewish state, saying that focusing on issue of 1967 borders was missing the point.
Netanyahu firmly rejected Obama’s call for a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians based on 1967 borders in statements on Thursday and Friday, saying such territorial lines are “indefensible” in light of the current demographic and security reality.
The official acknowledged that the U.S. president expressed frustration over the way the peace process developed, saying Obama has presented his vision as a way of getting started, and a way to avoid in September a repeat of the situation that happened in February, in which the UN Security Council voted on the condemnation of settlements and the U.S. vetoed the resolution.
“This time we might end up at the General Assembly with 187 countries voting for the recognition of the Palestinian state and two against it,” he said, adding “it’s bad for Israel and its bad for the United States. Netanyahu’s reaction has aggravated the situation and frankly I don’t know how he will get down from this tree.”
The official clarified that Obama mentioned 1967 borders with territory swaps as a basis for negotiations – not as a final point.
“We don’t see Hamas any differently than Israel does,” the official said, adding that the U.S. recognizes that it is a terror organization and is wary of the recent Hamas-Fatah reconciliation.
He added, “we cannot exclude an option of negotiation with the Palestinian Authority,” pending they accept the Quartet conditions.
When asked about whether the United States feels they still have leverage over Palestinians who have chosen to circumvent negotiations with Israel and turn to the international community, the official responded that the “Palestinians are clearly disappointed, but they should realize that the UN resolution doesn’t produce a state,” adding “they realize they cannot achieve it on their own, without using the United States’ connection with Israel.”
The official said that Obama is clear about both the Palestinian and the Israeli responsibility to bring about peace, adding that while Netanyahu’s and the Palestinians’ reactions to Obama’s speech were not surprising, the United States is disappointed.
The official added that it was paramount that the United States expresses where it stands together with its disappointment. The objective, he said, is to present an alternative to unilaterally declaring a Palestinian state, for this will not resolve the conflict.
“President Obama’s speech should be seen in its entirety, with 1967 borders and the swap of territories as the starting point for negotiations, not the final outcome,” said the official.
Strauss-Kahn released from jail on $1 million bail
NOVANEWS
Fallen IMF chief to stay at ‘temporary location’ in New York leading up to trial; France’s Lagarde leads race for new IMF chief while emerging nations want end to Europe’s grip on top job.
Reuters
Fallen IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn left jail on Friday and was expected to be whisked to a safe house in lower Manhattan where he will be kept under armed guard and electronic monitoring.
The race to succeed him in the top job in global finance was being led by French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde. Developing countries kept up pressure on Europe and the United States not to cut a backroom deal.
Strauss-Kahn, indicted for allegedly trying to rape a New York hotel maid last Saturday, was originally expected to be taken to an apartment on New York’s wealthy Upper East Side.
The plan was changed when news of the location leaked.
“The reason that we had to move is because members of the press attempted to invade his private residence,” defense lawyer William Taylor said.
The New York District Attorney’s office said the French politician and economist would be “going to a temporary location upon his release.”
Efforts to find a location where he could stay under strict surveillance during the months of legal process leading up to his trial hit a bump on Friday.
Residents of a tony Upper East Side apartment building objected to the rental by his wife, Anne Sinclair, of two apartments for the duration out of concern about the media onslaught that has followed his case, a court official told The New York Times.
Strauss-Kahn, once seen as a possible next president of France and who played a central role in tackling the global financial crisis of 2007-09, denies the charges and has vowed to prove his innocence.
Lawyers representing him posted $1 million in bail and a $5 million insurance bond.
His resignation has triggered a contest among the world’s leading economies to come up with a replacement.
France’s Lagarde was in pole position to take over his job as many of Europe’s capitals rallied behind her.
She has been praised for her role in tackling the European debt crisis and her experience, with France this year chairing the Group of 20, in handing the often conflicting economic demands of advanced and developing economies.
The International Monetary Fund has always been run by a European.
The challenge for emerging economies to break Europe’s grip on the job got tougher when the most widely tipped potential candidate from among their ranks ruled himself out.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel all but endorsed Lagarde, telling a Berlin news conference: “Among the names mentioned for the IMF succession is French Minister Christine Lagarde, whom I rate highly.”
But diplomats said some European Union countries questioned whether the well-regarded corporate lawyer, who would be the first woman to head the IMF, could be anointed before a special court decides next month if she should be investigated in a French legal case.
Since Strauss-Kahn resigned on Wednesday, EU governments have rushed to find a European replacement before emerging nations, which have long demanded a bigger say in running the Washington-based global lender, can mount a bid for the job.
Emerging nations seek candidate
Asian, Middle Eastern and African diplomats at the IMF headquarters in Washington said emerging nations were seeking a consensus candidate.
That task was made harder when former Turkish economy minister Kemal Dervis, seen as the front-runner among potential non-European contenders, ruled himself out.
“Speculation about succession at the IMF has included me in the group of persons with relevant experience. But I have not been, and will not be, a candidate,” he said in a statement.
The New York Times reported that Dervis had an affair with a subordinate when he was a senior World Bank executive. Asked to comment, his office at the Brookings Institution in Washington said he would have no further statement.
European and U.S. officials want to move quickly to replace Strauss-Kahn but they also risk angering developing economies if they are seen to do a deal for Europe again.
Mexico sent a letter to the Group of 20 rich and emerging nations urging that the next IMF head be selected on merit, echoing calls from other emerging economies such as China whose clout in the world economy has grown in recent years.
“We are consulting broadly with the fund’s shareholders from emerging markets, as well as advanced economies,” said U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, stressing that the process should be open and move quickly.
“We are prepared to support a candidate with the requisite, deep experience and leadership qualities, and who can command broad support among the fund’s membership.”
The United States and European nations jointly hold more than half of the IMF’s votes, giving them enough power to decide who leads it.
Diplomats said European Council President Herman van Rompuy, who chairs summits of the 27-nation EU, and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso were trying to secure a deal on Lagarde after the three biggest European powers – Germany, France and Britain – threw their weight behind her.
Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs euro zone finance ministers, and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi endorsed her on Thursday.
“It has to be a quick decision. It would be best to have consensus before going to the G8,” one diplomat said.
Iran arrests 30 people suspected of spying for the U.S.
NOVANEWS
Washington has had no diplomatic presence in Iran since the 1979 revolution; arrests come two days after Obama made a speech reiterating that the U.S. views Tehran as a sponsor of terrorism.
Reuters
Iran has arrested 30 people it said were spying for the United States, official media reported on Saturday.
“The Intelligence Ministry’s active and pious forces, in their ardent confrontations with the agents of the CIA … arrested 30 people who were spies for America,” state television’s lunchtime news announced.
According to the semi-official Fars news agency, the suspects had passed information to U.S. officials at embassies and consulates in third countries, including Malaysia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.
It said Iran had identified 42 U.S. intelligence officers in such countries, saying: “they engage in collection of information regarding Iran’s nuclear, aerospace defense and bio-technology fields,” among other areas of interest.
Spying in Iran can carry the death penalty.
Washington has had no diplomatic presence in Iran since the 1979 revolution which deposed the U.S.-backed shah and was followed by the lengthy occupation of the U.S. embassy.
Diplomatic cables published by the WikiLeaks website showed the United States operated information-gathering desks on Iran in neighboring countries where diplomats would seek to glean intelligence from travelling Iranians.
The announcement of the arrests comes two days after U.S. President Barack Obama made a speech on the Middle East, reiterating Washington’s view that Tehran sponsors terrorism and is seeking nuclear weapons, charges Iran denies.

