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327 Congressmen sign letter to Obama expressing deep concern over treatment of Israel
More than 250 members of the U.S. Congress send letter to Clinton and the Obama administration declaring commitment to ‘unbreakable’ U.S.-Israel bond, urging the Obama’s administration to stop with the public theatrics and rhetoric and highly visible snubbing, and highlighting “In its declaration of independence 62 years ago, Israel declared: “We extend our hand to all neighboring states and their peoples in an offer of peace and good neighborliness, and appeal to them to establish bonds of cooperation and mutual help with the sovereign Jewish people settled in its own land.” In the decades since, despite constantly having to defend itself from attack, Israel has repeatedly made good on that pledge by offering to undertake painful risks to reach peace with its neighbors.”
Letter from members of Congress:
Dear Secretary Clinton:
We are writing to reaffirm our commitment to the unbreakable bond that exists between our country and the State of Israel and to express to you our deep concern over recent tension. In every important relationship, there will be occasional misunderstandings and conflicts.
The announcement during Vice President Biden’s visit was, as Israel’s Prime Minister said in an apology to the United States, “a regrettable incident that was done in all innocence and was hurtful, and which certainly should not have occurred.” We are reassured that Prime Minister Netanyahu’s commitment to put in place new procedures will ensure that such surprises, however unintended, will not recur.
The United States and Israel are close allies whose people share a deep and abiding friendship based on a shared commitment to core values including democracy, human rights and freedom of the press and religion. Our two countries are partners in the fight against terrorism and share an important strategic relationship.
A strong Israel is an asset to the national security of the United States and brings stability to the Middle East. We are concerned that the highly publicized tensions in the relationship will not advance the interests the U.S. and Israel share. Above all, we must remain focused on the threat posed by the Iranian nuclear weapons program to Middle East peace and stability.
From the moment of Israel’s creation, successive U.S. administrations have appreciated the special bond between the U.S. and Israel.
For decades, strong, bipartisan Congressional support for Israel, including security assistance and other important measures, have been eloquent testimony to our commitment to Israel’s security, which remains unswerving.
It is the very strength of this relationship that has, in fact, made Arab-Israeli peace agreements possible, both because it convinced those who sought Israel?s destruction to abandon any such hope and because it gave successive Israeli governments the confidence to take calculated risks for peace.
In its declaration of independence 62 years ago, Israel declared: “We extend our hand to all neighboring states and their peoples in an offer of peace and good neighborliness, and appeal to them to establish bonds of cooperation and mutual help with the sovereign Jewish people settled in its own land.”
In the decades since, despite constantly having to defend itself from attack, Israel has repeatedly made good on that pledge by offering to undertake painful risks to reach peace with its neighbors.
Our valuable bilateral relationship with Israel needs and deserves constant reinforcement.
As the Vice-President said during his recent visit to Israel: “Progress occurs in the Middle East when everyone knows there is simply no space between the U.S. and Israel when it comes to security, none. No space.”
Steadfast American backing has helped lead to Israeli peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan. And American involvement continues to be critical to the effort to achieve peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
We recognize that, despite the extraordinary closeness between our country and Israel, there will be differences over issues both large and small.
Our view is that such differences are best resolved quietly, in trust and confidence, as befits longstanding strategic allies. We hope and expect that, with mutual effort and good faith, the United States and Israel will move beyond this disruption quickly, to the lasting benefit of both nations.
We believe, as President Obama said, that “Israel’s security is paramount” in our Middle East policy and that “it is in U.S. national security interests to assure that Israel?s security as an independent Jewish state is maintained.”
In that spirit, we look forward to working with you to achieve the common objectives of the U.S. and Israel, especially regional security and peace.
| Print article | This entry was posted by Yael on March 25, 2010 at 7:15 pm, and is filed under Middle East Politics, U.S. Politics. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
(Photo by Dani Machlis)


about 5 months ago
Shall I laugh or cry?
about 5 months ago
Either and both would be appropriate!
Original reports underestimated the number who’ve signed onto the letter — it is nearly 300 members of Congress. That is like what, 75% of Congress? That amounts to Congress shaking the president until his little teeth rattle in an attempt to get him to behave because he is clearly out of line with the American public and American policy on this.
about 5 months ago
Sad.
about 5 months ago
A major blunder that reveals the incompetent manner our foreign policy is being handled by BHO, Hillary and Biden.
Yesterday’s headline in the news was: U.S. gets tough on Israel and goes soft on Iran.
Exactly the kind of news the vast majority of Americans don’t want to see.
One is wondering what Hillary is doing. So far she has basically been a no-show for all the time they have been in power. Foreign policy seemed to have been handled by the boss and Biden alone. It looked like a good idea, because Hillary tried to avoid being responsible for the mess her boss is making, so that she can run against him in 2012.
But now she got drawn into the fray. Her political judgment really needs to be questioned. I guess her husband would never have blundered that badly.
about 5 months ago
I’m sure these are going to sound like a stupid questions, but I hope some of the Israelis here will answer them anyway. Can any Israeli live in one of the West Bank settlements? Can any Israeli use the “settlers’ only” roads we sometimes here so much about? I have the same questions about east Jerusalem? The reason I ask is obviously Israeli society includes more groups than just Jews, but I think that the building over the Green Line is always portrayed here as for Jews only. Also, are there different rules for the ultra-orthodox communities or is it more that nobody who isn’t ultra-orthodox would ever want to live in one?
Israeli planning and zoning is somewhat confusing to me.
Later
about 5 months ago
Mike, yes anyone with an Israeli license plate can use the ’settler’ roads and in fact they are used frequently by Arab Israelis as well. The roads were built and designated israeli only because so many Israelis (Jews and Arabs) were murdered as they drove along the roads that used to be shared with the Palestinians –entire families were murdered like the mother and her 5 young daughters all under the age of 9, with the children being shot at point blank range after the wounded mother went off the road. And yes, any Israeli citizen can move into Israeli-designated areas. There are many Arab-Israeli citizens living in East Jerusalem for instance. Neither jewish nor arab israelis can live in Palestinian cities such as Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jenin, etc. and until very recently were barred from visiting in them (because again so many were attacked and killed while doing so in the late 90s and early 2000s –back in the 80s and early 90s Palestinians came here, israelis went there absolutely freely and with no problems, no checkpoints, no nothing).
The ultra-Orthodox do have their own ‘rules’ –technically anyone could live in their communities but it doesn’t happen by mutual choice. Our zoning laws are archaic and full of bureaucracy –it takes anywhere from 1-3 years to get permission to enclose a balcony and usually about 7 years to build from scratch unless you are building pre-fab, ready-made houses.
about 5 months ago
Thanks, though that was the case, but wanted to be sure.
about 5 months ago
There are a tremendous lot of ignorant people on this world.