KERRY ANGERED BY OBAMA INTERVIEW

Washington, 5 Jumadil Awal 1435/6 March 2014 (MINA) – Israel’s Maariv newspaper claimed on Wednesday that tensions surfaced between the US State Department and the White House after an interview given by President Barack Obama last week in which he attacked Israel’s positions over the negotiations.
 
Obama’s words, it is claimed, could sabotage the efforts made by Secretary of State John Kerry to reach a framework agreement between the Palestinians and Israelis.
 
Maariv quoted unnamed American and Israeli sources in Washington as saying that “the White House concealed the interview context from Kerry”, which angered him, Middle East Monitor (MEMO) quoted by Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA) as reporting.
 
According to the US source, Obama “attacked” Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally during the interview, “which could undermine Kerry’s efforts”.
 
The same source claimed that Kerry’s “greatest fear is that the interview could damage Netanyahu’s and Israel’s confidence in the efforts made by the US administration to reach an agreement”.

Obama promises Netanyahu to put pressure on Abbas

Also Read:  US SPY AGENCY COLLECTS 200 MILLION TEXT MESSAGES PER DAY

A senior US official said that US President Barack Obama promised Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he would put pressure on Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas “to make tough decisions” in the negotiations with Israel, adding that the meeting between the two leaders was not as contentious as previous encounters.

Israel’s Haaretz newspaper quoted the official as saying that Obama agreed to press Abbas during their meeting at the White House on 17 March to take “tough decisions.”

The official pointed out that Obama told Netanyahu that he intends to demand for Abbas to accept the framework agreement prepared by US Secretary of State John Kerry and to extend the peace talks until the end of 2014.

Also Read:  Man Who Threatened To Kill Muslims Gets One Year Jail

The source added that, unlike previous encounters, Monday’s meeting between Obama and Netanyahu went well and was free of tension or disagreement. “It was not a confrontational meeting, it was not a difficult meeting,” the official stressed.

Last week, in a blunt interview, Obama told Bloomberg News that he was planning to pressure Netanyahu to make difficult decisions, asking: “If not now, when? And if not you, Mr Prime Minister, then who? How does this get resolved?”

Upon his arrival in Washington on Sunday, Netanyahu struck a defiant tone, saying that: “The Israeli people expect me to stand strong against criticism and pressure.” However, after his meeting with Obama, he delivered an unusually optimistic speech on Tuesday to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the most powerful group in the Israel Lobby, suggesting that: “We all have so much to gain from peace.”(T/P08/E01)

Also Read:  German Chancellor Mulls No-Fly Zone In Syria

 
Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)
Comments: 0

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.