McCain slams Obama over Israel ‘temper tantrum’
Reuters/Ynetnews
Latest Update: 03.22.15
‘The least of your problems is what Bibi Netanyahu said during an election campaign,’ Republican senator tells US president amid reports the US is ‘reevaluating’ its Israel policy following PM’s rejection of Palestinian state.
WASHINGTON – US Senator John McCain accused President Barack Obama of throwing a “temper tantrum” over comments made by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who denounced his support for a Palestinian state, adding to the conflict between the White House and the Republican-dominated Congress over Israel.
McCain, asked on CNN’s “State of the Union” show if US-Israel relations were at a dangerous point, said, “I think that’s up to the president of the United States.”
Obama’s sensitive relationship with Netanyahu was strained further by comments Netanyahu made in the closing moments of his successful campaign for re-election last week, saying a Palestinian state would not be established as long as he was prime minister.
The remarks were widely interpreted as a rejection of the “two-state solution” that has been the basis of decades of talks to end the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, brokered by successive US Republican and Democratic administrations alike.
But the day after the elections, after his party secured 30 seats in the 20th Knesset, Netanyahu was quick to backtrack on his statement, arguing that he was not rejecting Palestinian statehood in principle, but responding to a reality in which the Palestinian Authority has a political pact with the Islamist group Hamas, under which statehood would be unacceptable.
“I haven’t changed my policy. I never retracted my speech in Bar-Ilan University six years ago calling for a demilitarized Palestinian state that recognizes the Jewish state,” he said.
In his first public comments about the issue following the Israeli elections, Obama told the Huffington Post over the weekend that he was taking Netanyahu at his word that the Israeli prime minister was not interested in the formation of a Palestinian state.
Obama said on Friday that Netanyahu’s comments had made it “hard to find a path” back to serious peace negotiations. He told Netanyahu on Thursday that Washington would have to “reassess” its policies in the Middle East.
Media reports said the United States was reviewing its position on a UN Security Council resolution on Palestinian state. In the past Israel has relied on US veto power on the Security Council to support its interests.
“The president should get over it,” McCain said on CNN. “Get over your temper tantrum, Mr. President.
“The least of your problems is what Bibi Netanyahu said during an election campaign. If every politician were held to everything they say in a political campaign, obviously that would be a topic of long discussion.”
McCain, a leading voice in Congress on foreign relations, urged Obama to focus on the growing Islamic State threat in the Middle East and curbing Iran’s nuclear program.
A misunderstanding
In Israel, Netanyahu’s allies blamed Obama’s unprecedented criticism against Netanyahu on a misunderstanding.