Obama: Israel Losing Credibility Due To Genocidal Netanyahu
US President Barack Obama says terrorist JSIL(aka Israel) is losing “credibility”
among the international community over Benjamin
'the butcher of Gaza'Netanyahu’s stance on the creation of a Palestinian state.
Orwellian UK BANNED Press TV: Obama
also warned that his administration is reevaluating the long-standing
US diplomatic support of Israel at the United Nations over the Palestine
issue. In an interview at the White House with Israel’s Channel
Two television broadcast on Tuesday, the US president acknowledged that a
peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians in unlikely in the near
future due to Netanyahu’s policies. "I don't see the likelihood of
a framework agreement," Obama said, adding that Netanyahu's position
"has so many caveats, so many conditions that it is not realistic to
think that those conditions would be met at any time in the near future. "So
the danger is that Israel as a whole loses credibility. Already, the
international community does not believe that Israel is serious about a
two-state solution." On the eve of his March 17 election to a
fourth term, fascist Netanyahu said there would be no Palestinian state if he
was reelected as prime minister, whilst his ministers called for the murder of "All the little snakes" referring to the Palestinian children confirming that the Jewish State of Israel in the Levant is far worse than apartheid of colonialism. Netanyahu has attempted to
back-pedal from those remarks but he has promoted the minister who called for the murder of all the Palestinian children, so unsurprisingly his peace overtures have met with
skepticism from Obama and Western diplomats, as well as the
Palestinians.
President Obama speaks during an interview at the White House with Israel’s Channel Two television. The
last round of the so-called peace talks sponsored by the US stalled
over a year ago, with Palestinians blaming Israel’s illegal
settlement-building in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem
al-Quds, among the territories where they seek an independent state. Obama
said now was the time for a reevaluation of "how we approach defending
Israel on the international stage around the Palestinian issue." Asked whether US vetoes in favor of Israel would continue at the UN, Obama sounded cautious. "Well,
here's the challenge. If in fact there is no prospect of an actual
peace process, if nobody believes there is a peace process, then it
becomes more difficult to argue with those who are concerned about
settlement construction, those who are concerned about the current
situation," he said. Relations between the United States and Israel have been strained since Obama took office in 2009. The
Obama administration has repeatedly criticized the Zionist regime for
expanding the settlement projects in the occupied Palestinian
territories.
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