Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Netanyahu trip exposes frostbitten relationship with U.S. president

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2015 10:51 AM

    WASHINGTON — When Israel's prime minister visits Washington soon, he'll find the White House doors slammed firmly shut.

    Ditto those at the State Department.

    A diplomatic tiff has exposed the depth of the frostbitten Benjamin Netanyahu-Barack Obama relationship, a contrast with the balmy ties with Canada toasted this week in Israeli newspapers.

    The American administration has announced the president won't meet with Benjamin Netanyahu during his visit in early March, nor will U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.

    The stated rationale is that it would be inappropriate to meet during the Israeli election. Polls suggest the centre-right Likud party of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces a tough fight in the March 17 vote.

    His trip to Washington dovetails with the nationalism-and-national-security messages of his re-election campaign. He'll speak to the U.S. Congress about the dangers of a potential nuclear-armed Iran and during that early-March trip will also attend a conference of America's biggest pro-Israel lobby group.

    The planning details of the visit hint at mutual distrust between the governments. The White House says it wasn't informed of Netanyahu's plan to be in the capital, at the invitation of congressional Republicans. It calls that a breach of protocol for a visiting leader.

    Now the president's announcing he won't meet Netanyahu.

    ''The president, obviously, does not see heads of state or candidates (during campaigns),'' State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Thursday.

    ''Neither will the secretary of state in close proximity to their election, so as to avoid the appearance of influencing a democratic election in a foreign country.''

    Asked whether the visit was an attempt to pump up the political prospects for Netanyahu, who has fallen slightly behind and now trails a centre-left coalition in the polls, Psaki replied: ''I'm just not going to do political analysis on the Israeli election from here.''

    A spokesman for Obama explained that the president had met multiple times with Netanyahu and would meet again with whoever wins the Israeli election.

    A piece in the Atlantic magazine a few months ago predicted a coming crisis in Israeli-U.S. relations, with the flashpoint being Netanyahu's staunch opposition to a nuclear deal with Iran.

    Negotiations are now at a critical stage. But Netanyahu will deliver a speech in Congress advocating a new economic sanctions bill against Iran, favoured overwhelmingly by Republicans and by many Democrats.

    The plan runs against the wishes of the president. Obama has threatened to veto any sanctions legislation now because he says that could derail talks with Iran at a sensitive moment.

    Adding to the drama is a suspiciously timed leak, involving highly classified information. A U.S. news outlet this week reported that the Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad, also opposes new sanctions and disagrees with Netanyahu.

    This is after U.S. officials were quoted in the Atlantic making disparaging remarks about Netanyahu a few months ago — accusing him of political cowardice in the Middle East process.

    Canadian relations with Netanyahu are another story.

    Asked whether it would meet with the Israeli prime minister during the election, a government spokesman replied with an email showing pictures of Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird in Israel this week.

    They showed Baird meeting with Netanyahu, and with politicians from rival parties. They included Shimon Peres, the former prime minister and president under the Labor and Kadima banners.

    A column this week in the Jerusalem Post called Baird ''arguably the most pro-Israel foreign minister in the world.'' While he was showered with praise there, some Palestinian protesters pelted eggs at his car during Baird's Mideast trip.

    A Middle East expert at the University of Ottawa said the fundamentals of the U.S.-Israel relationship remain strong, too.

    Thomas Juneau pointed to the US$3 billion in American aid and military support as examples of the unshaken foundation beneath the rocky personal relations at the top.

    ''It's not necessarily because the two leaders evidently dislike each other on a personal level that the relationship between the countries changes a lot,'' Juneau said.

    ''We are nowhere near anything that resembles an existential crisis in U.S.-Israeli relations.''

    But he said Netanyahu's early-March visit could reap political dividends back home, particularly the sight of him speaking from the podium in the U.S. Congress: ''I can only imagine that (his domestic political) rivals are not happy about that.''

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Michael Hume B.C. Trial Hears Phone Message From Alleged Sexual Assault Victim Pleading For Help

    Michael Hume B.C. Trial Hears Phone Message From Alleged Sexual Assault Victim Pleading For Help
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The trial of a longtime youth and justice worker accused of sexually assaulting a resident in a community he once helped has heard a recording of a phone call as the alleged victim pleaded for help.

    Michael Hume B.C. Trial Hears Phone Message From Alleged Sexual Assault Victim Pleading For Help

    School Prank By B.C. Boy Costs His Parents Nearly $50,000, Breaks New Legal Ground

    School Prank By B.C. Boy Costs His Parents Nearly $50,000, Breaks New Legal Ground
    The case involves a then-14-year-old boy who caused $48,630 in damage when he attached a padlock to just one sprinkler head inside Wellington secondary but set off other sprinklers. 

    School Prank By B.C. Boy Costs His Parents Nearly $50,000, Breaks New Legal Ground

    Court nixes rule requiring Air Canada to separate pooches, allergic passengers

    Court nixes rule requiring Air Canada to separate pooches, allergic passengers
    The Canadian Transportation Agency has been ordered to reconsider a ruling that required Air Canada to separate pooches from passengers with dog allergies in its airline cabins.

    Court nixes rule requiring Air Canada to separate pooches, allergic passengers

    Bill Cosby moves on to second Ontario show after standing ovation last night

    Bill Cosby moves on to second Ontario show after standing ovation last night
    LONDON, Ont. — Bill Cosby's first Canadian performance may have gone ahead without a hitch but it remained to be seen whether his second appearance would roll out as smoothly in a city where residents opposing the embattled comedian vowed to send him a message.

    Bill Cosby moves on to second Ontario show after standing ovation last night

    Journalism has made some targets in Canada as well

    Journalism has made some targets in Canada as well
    Ottawa teenager Nora Sharmarke was only ten when her journalist father, Canadian Al Iman Sharmarke, was killed over his coverage of Islamic extremism in his native country of Somalia.

    Journalism has made some targets in Canada as well

    Mount Saint Vincent University instructor resigns, says he had sex with student

    Mount Saint Vincent University instructor resigns, says he had sex with student
    HALIFAX — A lecturer at a Halifax university has issued a public apology and resigned from his position after saying he had sex with a student and exchanged explicit images with her.

    Mount Saint Vincent University instructor resigns, says he had sex with student