Israeli ambassadors in several European Union
countries summoned for official rebukes over recent announcement of
construction tenders across the Green Line • Netanyahu: When did the EU
call in Palestinian ambassadors about incitement?
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu addresses foreign journalists in Jerusalem on Thursday
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Photo credit: Reuters |
Israeli ambassadors in the United Kingdom,
France and Italy were summoned by the governments of those countries
over the past few days to be officially rebuked over the recent announcement
of construction tenders for 1,400 new residential units across the
Green Line. The German and Spanish government also expressed their
opposition to the announcement.
A Foreign Ministry official in Jerusalem said a
number of other countries had also criticized the announcement, but not
to the level of an official rebuke.
On Friday, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman responded by ordering the ambassadors to Israel from Britain, France, Italy and Spain to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem to be rebuked for the "one-sided policy" of their countries.
On Friday, Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman responded by ordering the ambassadors to Israel from Britain, France, Italy and Spain to the Foreign Ministry in Jerusalem to be rebuked for the "one-sided policy" of their countries.
Lieberman instructed that the ambassadors be told that
Israel is making great efforts to advance the peace talks with the
Palestinians and that the public positions of their countries are
unbalanced, harm the negotiations process, and completely ignore the
reality on the ground.
Speaking to foreign journalists in Jerusalem
on Thursday night, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accused European
Union countries of hypocrisy on the settlement issue.
"Our ambassadors to the EU are now called in
because of this, the construction of a few houses," Netanyahu said.
"When did the EU call in the Palestinian ambassadors to complain about
the incitement that calls for Israel’s destruction? When did the
Palestinian get called in to hear complaints about the fact that
security officers in the Palestinian security forces are participating
in terrorist attacks against innocent Israelis."
"I think it’s time to stop this hypocrisy,"
Netanyahu said. "I think it’s time to inject some balance and fairness
into this discussion. Because I think this imbalance and this bias
against Israel doesn’t advance peace. I think it pushes peace further
away. Because it tells the Palestinians: You can basically do anything
you want, say anything you want, incite any way you want, and you won’t
be held accountable. And Israel that takes tremendous efforts to
preserve the peace and fight terrorism for the benefit of both Israel
and Palestinians alike, it always gets criticized. That’s not good and
doesn’t advance peace."
Netanyahu said the real issue in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict was not settlements, but rather the
"persistent refusal" of Israel's adversaries to accept the right of the
Jewish people to a nation-state,
In London, Britain's Foreign Office confirmed
the Israeli ambassador was summoned Thursday "over the Israeli
government's recent decision to announce new settlement tenders in east
Jerusalem and the West Bank."
In a statement, the government said it had
"made clear that settlement announcements had a detrimental impact on an
atmosphere conducive to productive talks. The U.K. urged Israel to
refrain from further such announcements."
Meanwhile, the Yesha Council has embarked on a campaign
against U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's efforts to broker an
Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. The campaign is called "Protecting
our country, not surrendering to Kerry."
The objective of the campaign is to isolate Kerry and
bolster Netanyahu. The campaign is using quotes by former Israeli
leaders, from both the Right and Left, that contradict Kerry's
positions. Among the quotes being featured in the campaign are one by
former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon against dividing Jerusalem and one by
former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on the importance of Israel
retaining control of the Jordan Valley.
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