Madeleine Albright on U.S.-Israel relationship, Iran, Arab Spring

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright

Charlotte, N.C., Sept. 5 – Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright expressed optimism about both the Arab Spring and Middle East peace talks while speaking during an event at the Democratic National Convention Wednesday.

“For those of us who are pro-Israel, and I consider myself one of them,” she said during The Bloomberg Link interview with Norman Pearlstine, “we believe Israel would be more secure with a two-state solution … and we want to see talks move forward.”

Saying that President Obama has been a good partner with Israel, she discussed connections between the two countries. We have a natural link to Israel based on democracy, she said.

Regarding discussions about the 2012 DNC platform being less pro-Israel than in 2008, the former Secretary of State said that is untrue.

“Jerusalem is one of the final status issues that needs to be dealt with in negotiations,” said Albright.

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GOP, DNC 2012: Language of the Platforms

Support of Israel  

Republicans:

Israel and the United States are part of the great fellowship of democracies who speak the same language of freedom and justice, and the right of every person to live in peace. The security of Israel is in the vital national security interest of the United States; our alliance is based not only on shared interests, but also shared values. We affirm our unequivocal commitment to Israel’s security and will ensure that it maintains a qualitative edge in military technology over any potential adversaries. We support Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state with secure, defensible borders; and we envision two democratic states – Israel with Jerusalem as its capital and Palestine – living in peace and security. For that to happen, the Palestinian people must support leaders who reject terror, embrace the institutions and ethos of democracy, and respect the rule of law. We call on Arab governments throughout the region to help advance that goal. Israel should not be expected to negotiate with entities pledged to her destruction. We call on the new government in Egypt to fully uphold its peace treaty with Israel.

The U.S. seeks a comprehensive and lasting peace in the Middle East, negotiated between the parties themselves with the assistance of the U.S., without the imposition of an artificial timetable. Essential to that process will be a just, fair, and realistic framework for dealing with the issues that can be settled on the basis of mutually agreed changes reflecting today’s realities as well as tomorrow’s hopes.

Democrats: 

The Middle East: President Obama and the Democratic Party maintain an unshakable commitment to Israel’s security. A strong and secure Israel is vital to the United States not simply because we share strategic interests, but also because we share common values. For this reason, despite budgetary constraints, the President has worked with Congress to increase security assistance to Israel every single year since taking office, providing nearly $10 billion in the past three years. The administration has also worked to ensure Israel’s qualitative military edge in the region. And we have deepened defense cooperation – including funding the Iron Dome system – to help Israel address its most pressing threats, including the growing danger posed by rockets and missiles emanating from the Gaza Strip, Lebanon, Syria, and Iran. The President’s consistent support for Israel’s right to defend itself and his steadfast opposition to any attempt to delegitimize Israel on the world stage are further evidence of our enduring commitment to Israel’s security. It is precisely because of this commitment that President Obama and the Democratic Party seek peace between Israelis and Palestinians. A just and lasting Israeli-Palestinian accord, producing two states for two peoples, would contribute to regional stability and help sustain Israel’s identity as a Jewish and democratic state. At the same time, the President has made clear that there will be no lasting peace unless Israel’s security concerns are met. President Obama will continue to press Arab states to reach out to Israel. We will continue to support Israel’s peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan, which have been pillars of peace and stability in the region for many years. And even as the President and the Democratic Party continue to encourage all parties to be resolute in the pursuit of peace, we will insist that any Palestinian partner must recognize Israel’s right to exist, reject violence, and adhere to existing agreements. Elsewhere in the region, President Obama is committed to maintaining robust security cooperation with Gulf Cooperation Council states and our other partners aimed at deterring aggression, checking Iran’s destabilizing activities, ensuring the free flow of commerce essential to the global economy, and building a regional security architecture to counter terrorism, proliferation, ballistic missiles, piracy, and other common threats.

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Middle East experts focus on U.S.-Israel relationship during RNC

By Lauren Appelbaum and Ashley Gold

AJC Panel on U.S. Values and Interests in a Changing Middle East with Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), AJC's Jason Isaacson, Amb. Mark Green, Amb. Barukh Binah

AJC Panel on U.S. Values and Interests in a Changing Middle East with Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), AJC’s Jason Isaacson, Amb. Mark Green, Amb. Barukh Binah

Tampa, Fla., Aug. 30 – While the Middle East is shifting, Israel needs to remain a stronghold, Israeli Deputy Chief of Mission at the Embassy in Washington, Amb. Barukh Binah, said Thursday.

Speaking on the final day of the Republican National Convention during a panel titled “U.S. Values and Interests in a Changing Region,” Binah focused on two concerns to the security of both Israel and the U.S. – Iran and Syria.

“Iran is a huge obstacle, a huge hurdle,” Binah said. “It is not just a threat beyond the horizon; it is a day to day nuisance.”

Regarding the U.S.-Israel relationship, the Israeli Ambassador said, “Israel does not have a better ally than the United States, and the United States does not have a better ally than Israel.”

“There is no more important value for the U.S. in the Middle East than maintaining alliances,” Binah added.

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Romney’s meeting with Netanyahu spotlights regional issues

Mitt Romney and Benjamin Netanyahu meeting at the Prime Minister's office on July 29, 2012

Mitt Romney and Benjamin Netanyahu meeting at the Prime Minister’s office on July 29, 2012

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, July 29 – Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney was briefed Sunday by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the start of a day of meetings with Israeli and Palestinian leaders.

“You’ve been a personal friend of mine and a strong friend of the state of Israel,” Netanyahu said as he welcomed Romney to his office. The two leaders have known each other for decades since the two men worked at Boston Consulting Group together.

“In this great convulsion, there is one stable, democratic ally of the United States here in the Middle East, and that’s Israel,” Netanyahu said. “That’s why I think that strengthening the relationship between America and Israel is in the interest of peace, in the interest of both our countries, and I believe that your visit is an expression of that desire on both of our peoples.”

“We have a relationship between our nations which spans many years and, at the same time, is one based not just on mutual interest, but also on shared values,” Romney replied. “Like Israel, we share a commitment to democracy, to freedom of speech, to freedom of association, to the preservation of human rights;  and these common values and common principles have caused our nations to draw closer over the years.”

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Middle East pundits differ on approach but agree U.S.-Israel relationship is strong

Clarence Page, Eleanor Clift and William Kristol speak about “The Current State of U.S.-Israel Relations”

Clarence Page, Eleanor Clift and William Kristol speak about “The Current State of U.S.-Israel Relations”

By Robert Pines, TIP Fellow

Washington, June 19 – Three leading pundits – who differ in political views regarding the current administration’s approach to Israel – all agree the U.S.-Israel relationship is strong.

Speaking on Monday during a briefing hosted by The Israel Project, Chicago Tribune‘s Clarence Page said while President Obama has not visited Israel, he has maintained decent relations with the Jewish state while simultaneously balancing American interests in the region.

The Weekly Standard‘s William Kristol, representing a more conservative viewpoint, argued Obama “did not begin with the same instinctive history” in dealing with Israel. Characterizing Obama as hostile toward Israel early on in his administration, Kristol said there is no real policy in effect today. Kristol said this lull in U.S.-Israel relations has given way to uncertainty in U.S. foreign policy, not only regarding Israel but Iran and the greater Middle East region as well.

“We don’t know what a Romney administration foreign policy would look like, but we don’t know what second-term Obama administration foreign policy would be either,” Kristol said.

Eleanor Clift, of Newsweek/Daily Beast said, a “second-term Obama foreign policy would likely be just as reluctant on military action in Iran.”

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Campaigns debate relationship with Israel, Iran at TIP briefing

By Ari Bildner, Staff Writer

Former Rep. Robert Wexler, President of the S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace; Foreign Policy Advisor, Obama 2012 Campaign

Former Rep. Robert Wexler, President of the S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace; Foreign Policy Advisor, Obama 2012 Campaign

Mary Beth Long, Co-chair of the Romney campaign’s Middle East/North Africa policy working group

Mary Beth Long, Co-chair of the Romney campaign’s Middle East/North Africa policy working group

Washington, June 18 – Advisers to the Romney and Obama campaigns sparred Monday about the American response to the Iranian threat and the U.S.-Israel relationship at a Capitol Hill briefing organized by The Israel Project.

“This administration has gone beyond the call of duty” in strengthening the bilateral relationship, said former Democratic Rep. Robert Wexler, who now heads the non-partisan S. Daniel Abraham Center for Middle East Peace.

Wexler gave several instances he said highlighted the “unprecedented” cooperation between the U.S. and the Israeli government.

Mary Beth Long, a foreign policy adviser to Republican presumptive nominee Mitt Romney, argued that defense department budget cuts could limit America’s ability to pursue its regional interests in the future.

“We need to increase our ability to project credible defensive capabilities into the Middle East,” she said. Long also said the administration was perceived by many of “being more concerned with Israel going to war than Iran than Iran building a nuclear weapon,” a line Romney used when speaking to the Faith and Freedom Coalition on Saturday.

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Clinton urges Assad to transfer power, leave Syria

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

By Ari Bildner, Staff Writer

Washington, June 7 – In her bluntest remarks yet on the violence in Syria, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for President Bashar Assad to step down and leave the country.

“Assad must transfer power and depart Syria,” Clinton said at a news conference Thursday in Istanbul after meeting foreign ministers from Arab and Western nations to discuss counterterrorism.

“The regime-sponsored violence that we witnessed again in Hama yesterday is simply unconscionable. Assad has doubled down on his brutality and his duplicity and Syria will not, cannot be peaceful, stable or certainly democratic until Assad goes.”

On Wednesday, at least 78 people were killed in the central Syrian village of Mazraat al-Qubeir, near the city of Hama in what anti-Assad activists were calling a massacre by Syrian troops and gunmen loyal to the president.

The United Nations reported that monitors were blocked by the government from reaching the site of the massacre on Thursday. The killings come a week after more than 100 people, many of them women and children, were killed in the town of Houla by regime forces.

Romney calls for more assertive measures to end Assad regime

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, May 29 – After the international community blamed the Assad regime in Syria for killing 108 civilians in Houla,  many nations expelled the Syrian ambassadors to their countries. The United Nations said that many of the victims, who included 49 children and 34 women, were summarily executed. The Syrian government continues to maintain that “terrorists” were behind the massacre.

Today, Mitt Romney released a statement on the expulsion of Syrian diplomats by nations around the world:

I welcome the expulsion of Syrian diplomats by the United States and other partner nations. But it only underscores the need for more assertive measures to end the Assad regime. President Obama’s lack of leadership has resulted in a policy of paralysis that has watched Assad slaughter 10,000 individuals. We should increase pressure on Russia to cease selling arms to the Syrian government and to end its obstruction at the United Nations. And we should work with partners to arm the opposition so they can defend themselves.

Gruesome images of bloodied corpses streamed out of Syria Saturday, triggering worldwide condemnation and highlighting the failure of a six-week-old United Nations ceasefire plan to stop the government’s killings that have left 11,000 people dead, according to opposition groups.

U.S. leaders respond to Syria massacre, worst violence since U.N. ceasefire started

By Lauren Appelbaum, Political Director

Washington, May 27 – More than 109 people, including dozens of children, were massacred Friday in Houla, a rebel-held Sunni village near the troubled city of Homs in Syria. Today the Syrian government has accused “terrorist” rebels of the massacre, which is among the worst carnage in the 14-month-old uprising against President Bashar al-Assad that has cost about 10,000 lives.

World leaders expressed shock.

“We are horrified by credible reports of targeting killing, including stabbing and ax attacks on women and children in Houla. These acts serve as a vile testament to an illegitimate regime that responds to peaceful political protest with unspeakable and inhuman brutality,” U.S. National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said today.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton demanded that those who carried out the killings be held to account.

“The United States will work with the international community to intensify our pressure on Assad and his cronies, whose rule by murder and fear must come to an end,” she said. “We stand in solidarity with the Syrian people and the peaceful marchers in cities across Syria who have taken to the streets to denounce the massacre.”

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney issued a statement today calling on the U.S. to “lead and put an end to the Assad regime:”

“The Assad regime’s massacre of civilians in Haoula—many of them young children—is horrific. After nearly a year and a half of slaughter, it is far past time for the United States to begin to lead and put an end to the Assad regime. President Obama can no longer ignore calls from congressional leaders in both parties to take more assertive steps. The Annan ‘peace’ plan—which President Obama still supports—has merely granted the Assad regime more time to execute its military onslaught. The United States should work with partners to organize and arm Syrian opposition groups so they can defend themselves. The bloodshed in Haoula makes clear that our goal must be a new Syrian government, one that contributes to peace and stability in the Middle East and that truly represents the brave Syrian people.”

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Key Republican Senator Talks Syria, Israel, Iran

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida

U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida

By Ari Bildner, Staff Writer

Washington, April 25 – The downfall of embattled Syrian President Bashar Assad would strengthen Israel and improve the prospects for peace, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio said Wednesday.

“The security of our ally, the strongest and most enduring democracy in the region, Israel, with whom we are bound by the strongest ties of mutual interest and shared values and affection would improve as well. And so would the prospects for peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors improve,” Rubio said.

The Republican senator has been touted as a top vice-presidential pick for presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney despite his repeated denials of interest. During the speech at the Brookings Institution, he waded into the foreign policy realm as speculation in Washington grows about the possibility of a Romney-Rubio ticket come November.

Syria has been embroiled in 13-months of violence, after demonstrators were attacked by regime forces last March.  The death toll, much of it from Assad forces killing civilians, is estimated to have reached 11,000 by mid-April. A cease-fire is now technically in place, although international monitors have said the regime has not adhered to it.

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