Welcome, Guest! - or

Israel - World Anticipates Netanyahu's Major Speech to Inject Zionist Perspective

Published on:   Jun 13, 2009 at 10:50 PM
News Source:  Washington Post
Change text size Text Size  


Israel - When Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu delivers a major foreign policy address Sunday, the setting will be part of the message: He will speak at Bar-Ilan University, which was founded in 1955 to unite secular learning with religious Zionism.

Advisers to Netanyahu and Israeli political analysts say the speech will be a response to President Obama's address to Muslims this month at Cairo University. Netanyahu, they say, wants to inject a Zionist "narrative" into a discussion that he believes was tilted in Obama's speech toward the Arab version of events.

While Netanyahu's remarks are expected to range across issues, including Obama's demand for a freeze on Jewish settlements and the U.S. president's call for the establishment of a Palestinian state, they will center on Netanyahu's assertion that Arabs must recognize Israel as a state for the peace process to succeed.

Advertisement:

The point is not a condition for the start of peace talks with the Palestinians or other Arab nations, Netanyahu's advisers have said. But just as Israel is being asked to acknowledge the Palestinian identity of a neighboring country under the "two-state solution" advocated by Obama and European leaders, Netanyahu believes that an end to the Arab-Israeli conflict requires a similar acknowledgment from the other side, they say.

"They need to cross the Rubicon of a Jewish state," said a Netanyahu adviser involved in preparing the speech. "That will be necessary for an agreement, because then you know the conflict is over."

The run-up to Netanyahu's speech has been dominated by debate in the media and in political circles about how he will address Obama's call for a settlement freeze and whether he will endorse the establishment of a Palestinian state. Netanyahu and his governing coalition oppose both ideas, and they say that security concerns still make creation of a Palestinian state and a withdrawal from the West Bank too risky. That argument is likely to be bolstered by the reelection of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose support of the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas and pursuit of nuclear technology are considered among Israel's chief threats.

In announcing plans for the address, Netanyahu said it would spell out "our principles for achieving peace and security" while "attempting to reach maximum understanding with the U.S. and our friends around the world."

ad_icon

Coalition members and others said after meetings with Netanyahu that they do not expect major concessions to the United States and that any endorsement of a Palestinian state will rest on a long list of conditions. Netanyahu has said that any Palestinian entity would have to be demilitarized, not be allowed to control its airspace, and lack other powers traditionally associated with a modern state.

The aim is not to settle all issues but to "articulate his vision of how Israel wants to move forward in the peace process," Netanyahu spokesman Mark Regev said.

Obama's Middle East envoy, former senator George J. Mitchell, was in the region this past week promoting the president's ultimate aim of a regional Arab-Israeli peace. Mitchell arrived in Damascus, the Syrian capital, on Friday night.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has said he will not agree to restart peace negotiations unless Israel agrees to a settlement freeze. Palestinian officials say that recognizing Israel as a Jewish state would undermine the status of Israel's Arabs, who make up about 20 percent of the population, and also would prejudge the fate of Palestinian refugees living in other Arab countries. Any resolution of the "right of return" for those refugees, Palestinians say, should be part of final negotiations.

But Netanyahu's speech will also try to respond more directly to Obama's effort in Cairo to "reset" U.S. relations with the Arab and Muslim world. While the speech was credited in Israel for reaffirming the alliance between the two countries and for strong language about Holocaust denial, Israeli analysts said that it also seemed to interpret key issues from an Arab perspective.

It associated Israel's creation directly with the Holocaust, for example, rather than acknowledging the long-standing Zionist efforts to provide a Jewish homeland. It also dated the problems of Palestinians to Israel's creation in 1948 without mentioning Arab rejection of a proposed partition plan and other events that Israelis regard as fundamental to the conflict.

Gerald Steinberg, chair of Bar-Ilan's political science department, said Netanyahu will probably use language on settlements and Palestinian statehood that will leave room for negotiation. But the broader message may well dominate.

"Obama said a couple of things that were disturbing, and I expect Netanyahu to set the record straight on that," Steinberg said. "The heart of the speech is going to be the narrative -- of accepting the right of the Jewish people to sovereign equality. If that issue has not changed, then there is no point in moving forward."


More of today's headlines

Sydney, Australia - The man accused of one of the biggest frauds in history - the suspected fleecing of up to $1.5 billion from wealthy South African investors - stood... Washington - The son of the elderly, Jew-hating madman who attacked the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, blasted his father as an evil "coward" who deserved to...

 

Total7

Read Comments (7)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Jun 13, 2009 at 10:58 PM Anonymous Says:

Hope Netanyahu read parshas Shelach this past Shabbos. He should know that Hashem will protect us against our enemies and that we cannot give in to them.

2

 Jun 14, 2009 at 05:49 AM Anonymous Says:

He's a failure

3

 Jun 14, 2009 at 02:25 AM Why Says:

Whatever he says now is going to be used against us. I hope he just sticks to Jews right to egsist.

4

 Jun 14, 2009 at 07:19 AM Milhouse Says:

So long as he is still forcing Jews out of their homes, just because a previous Israeli government promised the Americans that there would be no more "settlements", his words are meaningless. If Moshe Zar can't build a new village on his own land, that he bought fair and square, then Netanyahu has no right to live in Y'm. No court in America would allow this sort of discrimination.

5

 Jun 14, 2009 at 12:39 AM Milhouse Says:

So long as he's still destroying Jewish homes on the pretext that they are "outposts", his words will mean nothing. So long as Moshe Zar cannot build a Jewish town on his own land that he bought fair and square, because a past Israeli government promised the USA "no new settlements", no Jew's right to live anywhere in the world can be secure. In America no court would allow such a policy to exist; how is it that in the supposedly "zionist" state of Israel it is allowed?

6

 Jun 14, 2009 at 10:00 AM Elections Have Consequences Says:

1. Israelies are terrible when it comes to PR. I think Natanyahu is the only one who could speak english like 3/4 of a mentch.

2. Israelies are their own worst enemies by calling these places "settlements" and not by the real name CITIES. Can you imagine calling NYC a settlement? How about Boston, Baltimore, Phily, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, Denver, LA, SanFran, Seattle, Portland, etc etc.????

7

 Jun 14, 2009 at 08:15 PM ZR Says:

Carter, why the love affair just for the Palestinians? Why not for all the other oppressed and occupied peoples in the world? What about the peaceful and occupied Tibetans? What about (the not so peaceful) Kurds whose country was stolen by Iraq, Turkey, and Iran? Why don’t they get any love or even acknowledgement of the fact they deserve a country?

The only thing unique about the Palestinians plight over all the other peoples in oppression is their ruthlessness in their struggle and the fact their quarrel is against “those #$%^ Jews”.

8

If you wish to post anonymously do not fill out this field.
Says:

Your email address will not be published.

Reply to #  
Says:

Important: Please read the rules before submitting your opinion.
Scroll Up
Advertisements: