By Rachel Hirshfeld
First Publish: Arutz Sheva -
Rudy Giuliani
Jason Bedrick
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani recently called President Obama “the least supportive president of Israel” in history and claimed the idea that Obama is a friend of the Jewish state to be “the biggest joke” he’s ever heard.
In
a video published on YouTube this week, Giuliani is asked a number of
questions regarding the president’s record on Israel, including Obama’s
remarks that negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority
should be based on pre-1967 boundary lines.
“That
would be ridiculous if they had to go back to those territorial lines,”
Giuliani said. “They’d be in such jeopardy with what’s going on in the
volatile Middle East right now. As a prime minister of Israel, you
couldn’t possibly agree to what President Obama is talking about.”
Asked
what he believes to be the significance of Obama having not traveled to
Israel during his entire term in office, Giuliani simply responded by
saying that he believes that “President Obama has not been very
favorable to the state of Israel.”
“It
isn’t just that he doesn’t go to Israel - which I think is very
significant - but it’s that he has policies that are against the
interest of the people of the state of Israel,” he said.
Giuliani,
who ran for president himself in 2008, also said Obama “feels much more
empathy and sympathy’ for Israel’s enemies than for the Jewish state.
“I think he’s the least supportive president of the state of Israel that we’ve ever had since the state of Israel existed, Republican or Democrat,” Giuliani said.
As
President Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney
continue to vie for Jewish votes, the incumbent president attempted to
upstage his rival’s visit to Israel by announcing legislation expanding
military and civilian cooperation with the Jewish state. At the same time, his spokesmen were unable to name the capital of the Jewish state and continues to downplay the Iranian threat to Israel.
Romney
spoke aggressively on Sunday about protecting Israel from the Islamic
regime’s nuclear threats and suggested that he was open to breaking with
US policy dating to 1967 by moving the United States embassy to
Jerusalem.
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