I don’t believe that Netanyahu would ever willingly accept a two-state solution at any time, but I also believe that at some point some Israeli leader may have no choice but to accept it. But I don’t currently see when that would ever be. At the moment I am more concerned that many American Jews in influential positions appear to be disloyal to the United States and more loyal to Israel. I include in this group former American Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk, who is actually Australian, and no qualification to be American Ambassador to Israel, except that the moved here and headed up a bunch of Jewish interest groups. He clearly is a Jew first, with little loyalty to either Australia or America. And of course, the two most recent ambassadors from Israel to the US, were American citizens, born in the US, before they renounced their American citizenship to become Israeli Ambassadors.
Sunday, March 22, 2015
Netanyahu Encourages American Disloyalty
I am disappointed in Netanyahu’s election, and suspicious of how his statements were handled by American news media. Just before his election, he said that he would not support a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine. Then after he was elected, and his comments had produced a strong unfavorable reaction in the US, he told Andrea Mitchell that he could accept a two-state solution. First, it seems suspicious that the gave this interview to Andrea Mitchell, a Jew, who at least in this interview revealed herself as a Jew first, a journalist second, and an American third. Netanyahu clearly chose her as a friendly means for getting his new statement out to the public with minimal questioning by the interviewer about why he completely reversed himself overnight on an issue that fundamentally affects Israel’s future existence. Other Jewish journalists, including the NYT’s David Brooks, picked up and defended his new statement, I believe using talking points probably circulated by Israeli Ambassador Dermer. They explained the Netanyahu statements as not being contradictory because before the election he was saying that a two-state solution was impossible “at this time,” and later that a two-state solution might be possible at some other time, although what time he was referring to in either case was not clear.
I don’t believe that Netanyahu would ever willingly accept a two-state solution at any time, but I also believe that at some point some Israeli leader may have no choice but to accept it. But I don’t currently see when that would ever be. At the moment I am more concerned that many American Jews in influential positions appear to be disloyal to the United States and more loyal to Israel. I include in this group former American Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk, who is actually Australian, and no qualification to be American Ambassador to Israel, except that the moved here and headed up a bunch of Jewish interest groups. He clearly is a Jew first, with little loyalty to either Australia or America. And of course, the two most recent ambassadors from Israel to the US, were American citizens, born in the US, before they renounced their American citizenship to become Israeli Ambassadors.
I don’t believe that Netanyahu would ever willingly accept a two-state solution at any time, but I also believe that at some point some Israeli leader may have no choice but to accept it. But I don’t currently see when that would ever be. At the moment I am more concerned that many American Jews in influential positions appear to be disloyal to the United States and more loyal to Israel. I include in this group former American Ambassador to Israel Martin Indyk, who is actually Australian, and no qualification to be American Ambassador to Israel, except that the moved here and headed up a bunch of Jewish interest groups. He clearly is a Jew first, with little loyalty to either Australia or America. And of course, the two most recent ambassadors from Israel to the US, were American citizens, born in the US, before they renounced their American citizenship to become Israeli Ambassadors.
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