JERUSALEM (AP) -- In his landmark
speech to the Arab world seven years ago, President Barack Obama warned
that Israeli settlements on occupied territories were undermining hopes
for peace. "It is time for these settlements to stop," he declared.As Obama heads into
the home stretch of his presidency, he leaves behind an unfulfilled vision. Not only did he fail to stop it, but he watched Israeli
construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem thrive - despite
repeated White House condemnations.
According
to Israeli government data obtained by The Associated Press, Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pushed a wave of construction during
the Obama presidency that matched, and even exceeded, the amount of
building that took place under his predecessors during the Bush years.
The
figures show the limits of U.S. influence over its close ally and a
reluctance to link financial support to Israel with policy differences.
Despite the Israeli defiance over settlements and a long history of
friction between Obama and Netanyahu, the two countries signed a deal
this week giving Israel $38 billion in U.S. military aid over 10 years,
the largest deal of its kind in American history.
And all of this exempts the United States from being a party to apartheid how?
Was just wondering since being a buddhist one asks loads of questions on a daily basis at times: if Michelle Obama was running instead of Hillary Clinton, is she a better candidate than Hillary? Or put it in another way, if Hillary wins and does one full term, does Michelle Obama prefer being a housewife or following in Hillary's shoes?
ReplyDeleteI suppose oil is more important than the moral high ground we pretend to have.
ReplyDelete