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Israel split over Obama’s outreach to Muslims

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  • Israel split over Obama’s outreach to Muslims

    JERUSALEM - Israel, the country most on edge about Barack Obama's outreach to Muslims, had decidedly mixed reactions Thursday to the U.S. president's speech in Cairo and his strong call for Israel to halt settlement expansion on territory the Palestinians claim for a future state.
    A government official said the speech could have been worse for Israel, while a settler spokeswoman called Obama naive and out of touch with reality. A dovish lawmaker said the speech created an important opportunity for peace.
    In his address aimed at healing rifts between the United States and the Muslim world, Obama devoted significant time to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He asked Muslims to accept Israel's right to exist as a nation, an event that came about after centuries of persecution and the Nazi genocide of six million Jews.

    He also made an emotional plea for the right of Palestinians to live in dignity in an independent state of their own. He even used the term "Palestine," in a break from standard references to a future Palestinian state.

    Government plays down any potential rifts
    Israel's initial official reaction was to play down any potential rift with the Obama administration, probably to avoid exacerbating already palpable tensions between the liberal U.S. leader and Israel's new hardline prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.
    "All in all, it's not bad. I don't think there's anything we disagree with here," said Danny Seaman, the director of Israel's Government Press Office.

    "The state of Israel isn't against reconciliation," he added, but warned against any moves that could "be used by the extremists to endanger Israel and endanger the peace process."
    Aliza Herbst, a 56-year-old resident of the West Bank settlement of Ofra, calmly watched Obama's speech on television and when he finished said "his naivety can be dangerous."

    "You can have your speechwriters, find every good thing a Muslim has every done. But more modern history is that the Muslim world is at war with the Western world," she said, referring to the speech's myriad references to historical contributions by Muslims.
    Michael Ben-Ari, an Israeli lawmaker from a far-right ultranationalist party, took the criticism of Obama a step further.
    "His hatred for the people of Israel led him to deliver a most dangerous speech that exposed his pro-Islamic trends, designed to undermine the vision of the people of Israel returning to their homeland," he said.

    Many Israelis had been anxious about Obama's speech, fearing the U.S. leader would use the stage to step up his recent criticism of Israel.
    No surprises
    But Seaman, the Israeli official, said the speech had no major surprises and that the current disagreements between Israel and the United States are "well-known."

    Netanyahu has refused to endorse a Palestinian state and said settlement construction will continue. Senior Israeli officials were meeting Thursday afternoon to formulate an official reaction to Obama's comments.
    Yuli Tamir, a dovish lawmaker from the centrist Labor Party, was filled with praise for Obama and his speech.
    "It's one of the most important speeches ever delivered, a key speech for changing the climate in the Middle East. Israel will make a big mistake if it ignores it," she said.

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31102958/
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

  • #2
    Yeah ... lets hear some more. A yesterday a coworker a talk as if the problem is all coming from one side.
    "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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    • #3
      Far-right wing activists launch anti-Obama campaign

      Far-right wing activists launch anti-Obama campaign
      Jun. 3, 2009
      Abe Selig , THE JERUSALEM POST
      Chanting "No, you can't!" and waving signs bearing messages in a similar vein, nearly 200 people held a demonstration outside the US Consulate on the capital's Rehov Agron on Wednesday evening, protesting the growing American pressure to stop construction in West Bank settlements.
      Speakers at the event included MK Michael Ben-Ari (National Union) and Esther Pollard, the wife of convicted spy Jonathan Pollard. All brought a similar message - that the American government does not have the right to dictate where Jews may or may not live within the Land of Israel.
      "Mr. Obama, we started demonstrating 16 years ago," said Rabbi Shalom Gold, the founder of Kehillat Zichron Ya'acov in Jerusalem's Har Nof neighborhood, alluding to the early days of the Oslo Accords. "You were in your '30s and you probably didn't know the first thing about Eretz Yisrael... but we're part of God's divine plan, we're here and we're staying here!"
      "Be a friend of Israel, but even if you won't be, we have the greatest ally in the world," he said, pointing to the heavens.
      Esther Pollard followed, telling the crowd that her message to the US president was that "your problem isn't with Prime Minister Netanyahu, nor is it with the People of Israel. Your problem, Mr. President, is with the almighty God of Israel!"
      The protest continued for more than two hours, as the demonstrators ebbed and flowed and consular staff across the street came out to watch the goings-on.
      The protest was only a part of a wider campaign launched by activists on Wednesday, in which they will try to counter the American stance by portraying Obama as an anti-Semite whose policies would harm the Jewish state.
      Over the coming days, activists plan to hang posters throughout the country of Obama wearing a keffiyeh, flanked by the words, "Anti-Semite," and "Jew-hater," written in red in both English and Hebrew. Another poster published by the campaign shows Obama shaking hands with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad against a background of a mushroom cloud from a nuclear explosion.
      The Jewish National Front, which is backing the protests, said in a statement: "We decided to launch a campaign against the president of the United States and to say that Barack Hussein Obama is bad for the Jews."
      "From the moment that he entered the White House, we have been feeling anti-Semitism and hatred toward Israel," the statement continued. "We have a number of plans, among which are demonstrations in the US and protests in front of the consulate and homes of the ambassadors."
      Later Wednesday evening, Peace Now issued a statement harshly criticizing the campaign, saying the anti-Obama posters and demonstrations would cause considerable damage to the friendship between the US and Israel.
      "The radical Right is damaging our strategic alliance with the US, and is embarrassing Israel in front of the world," the organization said. "[Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu] must renounce this campaign of the settlers at once, and act decisively against the hilltop youth and those who are breaking the law in the settlements."
      Jerusalem Post staff contributed to this report.
      Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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      • #4
        Dem going on like the world revolve around them! Talk shite bout God's chosen people
        Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
        - Langston Hughes

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        • #5
          Originally posted by MdmeX View Post
          Dem going on like the world revolve around them! Talk shite bout God's chosen people
          Funny, a fellow coworker and I was having a discussion about this very issue and he made it abundantly clear that he has a biased that leans towards Israel. I guess he is one that buys into the myth bout God's Chosen people.
          "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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          • #6
            extremists are on both sides... i watched obama's speech and it was a honest speech filled with truths... he addressed both sides equally, imho...
            'to get what we've never had, we MUST do what we've never done'

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Baddaz View Post
              extremists are on both sides... i watched obama's speech and it was a honest speech filled with truths... he addressed both sides equally, imho...
              I saw it as being honest as well. The reaction of these people reminds of a series on CNN called God's Warriors.
              "Jamaica's future reflects its past, having attained only one per cent annual growth over 30 years whilst neighbours have grown at five per cent." (Article)

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              • #8
                They are God's WARLORDS!!
                Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
                - Langston Hughes

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                • #9
                  Its not a myth to you if your religion teaches you that, now is it?

                  Certainly not any more a myth than believing the Jesus was born of a virgin or any other such story based on religion.
                  "‎It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men" - Frederick Douglass

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