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from: Jeff Snyder
date: 2010-03-15 19:50:00
subject: Hard-Nosed Netanyahu

Isn't this exactly what I said would happen? Netanyahu and his gang will
just hunker down until the storm blows over, and then these new housing
units will be built in East Jerusalem. As I've said before, by his
hard-nosed actions, Netanyahu is making peace talks totally impossible. With
good reason the Palestinians can't trust the man or deal with him. He was
bad news when he was P.M. before, and he continues to be bad news now.


Netanyahu Offers Apology, but No Shift in Policy

By ISABEL KERSHNER - NYT

March 14, 2010


JERUSALEM -- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel told his cabinet on
Sunday that the ill-timed announcement of new housing plans for a Jewish
neighborhood in East Jerusalem during a visit by Vice President Joseph R.
Biden Jr. last week had been "regrettable" and "hurtful."

Mr. Netanyahu also said that the government had set up a committee to
"examine the chain of events and to ensure procedures" to prevent such an
episode from happening again.

But he did not indicate that the building project would be canceled -- a
move that might mollify the Obama administration and ease the start of
indirect, American-mediated peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
In fact, the prime minister did not refer explicitly at all to the
contentious issue of building in East Jerusalem.

The Obama administration's anger over the announcement on Tuesday of new
construction -- which embarrassed Mr. Biden and complicated efforts to
restart peace negotiations -- clearly had not subsided. David Axelrod, a
senior adviser to President Obama, said Sunday: "What happened there was an
affront. It was an insult."

Mr. Netanyahu, who was by all accounts surprised by the announcement by
Israel's Interior Ministry, told his cabinet on Sunday that the incident
took place "in all innocence."

But Mr. Axelrod, speaking on the ABC News program "This Week," said the
announcement had "seemed calculated to undermine" the embryonic indirect
talks between Israel and the Palestinians, which are being called "proximity
talks."

Mr. Netanyahu awoke Sunday morning to scathing criticism from commentators
in Israeli newspapers, who accused him of incompetence and a failure of
leadership.

Almost a year after taking office, the prime minister seems caught between
the pressure to move forward with the peace talks, a prerequisite for
building trust with the United States, and the resistance of the rightist
parties in his governing coalition, including his own party, Likud.

In a column that appeared Sunday in the newspaper Maariv, Ben Caspit wrote
that Mr. Netanyahu "keeps popping back and forth between those two weddings,
and asks himself where he's going to get caught when the music stops
playing."

"Well, that music stopped and he was caught, as usual, in between. Neither
here nor there," Mr. Caspit wrote.

Some analysts said that Mr. Netanyahu's problem was not about constraints
imposed by a coalition of his own making; they noted that conservatives in
the Israeli government have no real alternative to Mr. Netanyahu, while he
has the option of forming a different coalition with the centrist Kadima
Party, which currently sits in opposition. That alternative, though, would
come at some political cost for the prime minister.

Instead, they said, Mr. Netanyahu is still juggling his commitment to the
peace process and his reluctance to break with the ideological right, which
essentially opposes an accommodation with the Palestinians, and he has yet
to make up his mind.

"Mr. Netanyahu holds the cards," said Yehuda Ben Meir, a public opinion
expert at the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv
University. In the end, the prime minister "will have to decide in which
direction he is going," he said. "He cannot please everyone all
the time."

The plans for 1,600 apartments were announced by the Interior Ministry,
which is run by Shas, a Sephardic ultra-Orthodox party that forms an
important part of Mr. Netanyahu's governing coalition. The apartments are
supposed to be constructed in Ramat Shlomo, an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood
in East Jerusalem in territory that was conquered by Israel from Jordan in
the 1967 war. Israel claims sovereignty over all of Jerusalem; the
Palestinians claim the eastern part as the capital of a future state.

Under heavy American and Palestinian pressure, in November Mr. Netanyahu
declared a partial, 10-month freeze in residential construction in West Bank
settlements, a move praised by the Obama administration as unprecedented.
But he made it clear that the freeze would not apply in East Jerusalem,
avoiding further confrontation with the Israeli right.

In a tense 43-minute telephone conversation with Mr. Netanyahu on Friday,
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the housing announcement on
Tuesday had sent a "deeply negative signal" about Israeli-American
relations. Mrs. Clinton also told the prime minister that Israel must take
specific actions to show its commitment to the relationship with the United
States and to the peace talks, according to a State Department spokesman.
Neither American nor Israeli officials have detailed what such actions might
entail.

On the Israeli right, the prevailing feeling was that the problem lay not
with Mr. Netanyahu but with the United States.

Danny Danon, a Likud legislator and a deputy speaker of Parliament who
supports additional settlement construction, said that Mrs. Clinton's
"meddling in internal Israeli decisions regarding the development of our
capital, Jerusalem, is uninvited and unhelpful."

"In fact, it is sheer chutzpah," Mr. Danon said.

Prof. Efraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies
at Bar-Ilan University, said the "Americans decided to make a crisis" over
the proposed construction, "probably in order to extract more concessions
from Israel."

But he also offered some criticism of Mr. Netanyahu, saying he was
disappointed with the prime minister's apologies. "I expected him to say,
'Jerusalem is ours,' and he did not," he said. "From my point of
view, he is
trying to be too flexible."



Jeff Snyder, SysOp - Armageddon BBS  Visit us at endtimeprophecy.org port 23
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