Tags:
Nuclear issues
Obama-Netanyahu
Peace talks
US President Barack Obama indicated this at the end of his White House
conversation with Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu Tuesday,
July 6, which both called "excellent." What he said was there had been
"no change" in US policy in the wake of the Non-Proliferation Treaty
conference in May, which called on Israel to join the treaty. The US
president stressed that given its size, history and the levels of
threat Israel faces: "We will not ask Israel to take steps that
endanger its security."
debkafile's
Washington sources: This was taken to mean that the US policy of
ambiguity regarding Israel's reported nuclear arsenal was unchanged and
Israel would not be pressed to joint the NPT.
Netanyahu praised the latest round of UN sanctions against Iran and
the new US measures. He urged other countries to follow the US
president's lead and initiate much tougher sanctions. Only then will it
be possible to tell if they are biting enough to prevent Iran attaining
a nuclear weapon, said the Israeli prime minister.
The US president did not reply directly when asked if he had asked
Israel to extend the 10-month settlement-Jerusalem construction freeze
when it expires on September 26. He said he hoped the right climate
would enable face-to-face talks to go forward by September and stressed
he believes Israel and its prime minister are serious about peace and
will take risks to achieve it.
He added that the Israeli people deserved a secure peace - not Iran's
proxies next door or rockets falling on them and repeated his call for
Palestinian sovereignty and two states living side by side in peace.
Confidence-building steps on both sides were important, said Obama. He
had discussed Mahmoud Abbas the need to stop "engaging in provocative
language, incitement and looking for opportunities to embarrass Israel."
While the US president denied any rift with Israel, Netanyahu praised
the cooperation with the US in fields which they both listed as the
economy, international relations, military, maintaining Israel's
military edge and intelligence-sharing -in ways not always made public
Netanyahu added that the special US-Israel bond - which both termed
"unbreakable" - was beneficial to the region.
Obama added that the continuing cooperation had broadened since he and
Netanyahu came to office and he hoped relations would continue to
improve.
The Israeli prime minister and his wife are spending three days in the
United States. He is due to meet with Secretary of state Hillary
Clinton, Jewish American leaders in New York. Sarah Netanyahu will also
meet with the First Lady, Michelle Obama.