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Obama says has 'substantive' dispute with Israeli PM

Published: 25 Mar 2015 - 11:50 am | Last Updated: 15 Jan 2022 - 05:20 pm


Washington---US President Barack Obama insisted Tuesday that his disagreement with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu represents a substantial policy difference and not a personal vendetta.
As the Israeli premier works to build a new coalition government at home, he faces one of the worst confrontations in his stormy relationship with the White House.
He has tried to play down declarations he made during his recent victorious election campaign in which he ruled out the creation of a Palestinian state and stigmatized Arab voters.
But Obama has not let him off the hook and, after White House leaks accused Israel of spying on US-Iran nuclear talks, he insisted the allies have more tough talking ahead.
"The issue is a very clear, substantive challenge," Obama told reporters at a joint White House news conference with Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani.
"We believe that two states is the best path forward for Israel's security, for Palestinian aspirations and for regional stability. 
"That's our view and that continues to be our view. And Prime Minister Netanyahu has a different approach."
Obama denied it was a matter of personal animosity between himself and Netanyahu, describing their notoriously cold relations as "business like."
But he said the United States still backs the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, and that he would take the issue up with Netanyahu's government once it is formed.
"This is a matter of figuring out how we get through a knotty policy difference that has great consequences for both countries and the region," he said.
Since Netanyahu's party won Israel's March 17 election, not a day has passed without a US comment -- official or otherwise -- on the implications of his hardline rhetoric.
During campaigning he said he would block a Palestinian state and on polling day raised the specter of an Israeli Arab rush to the polls to drum up right-wing votes.
Although Netanyahu has since tried to back-track -- denying he reneged on the idea of a two-state solution and apologizing for giving offense -- the damage has been done.
In addition to Obama's stern reminder, US officials have been feeding criticism of Israel's tactics to the American media. 
- 'Unprecedented' hostility -
In the latest headline, The Wall Street Journal reported US officials accusing Israel of spying on nuclear negotiations with Iran with the aim of thwarting an Obama foreign policy priority.
"It is one thing for the US and Israel to spy on each other. It is another thing for Israel to steal US secrets and play them back to US legislators to undermine US diplomacy," a senior official told the paper.
Current and former US officials quoted in the report said they believed Israel had passed on the information to US lawmakers in a bid to undermine support for the emerging deal. 
In a sign of jitters in Israel -- used to unquestioned close ties to its senior ally -- Israeli officials rushed to deny the report, which caused little fuss in Washington, where Israeli espionage is accepted as a given. 
Israel's Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman flatly denounced the report as "incorrect and inaccurate."
AFP