US President Barack Obama on Wednesday denied a crisis was rocking US-Israeli relations, as one of the worst rows in years between the allies rumbled on over new homes for Jewish settlers.
Obama’s first public comments on the showdown came as his administration awaited a response from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about Washington’s sharp complaints over the episode.
The president was asked in an interview with Fox News if there was a “crisis” in US-Israeli relations after the announcement on 1,600 new settler homes in annexed east Jerusalem embarrassed US Vice President Joe Biden during a visit to the Jewish state.
“No,” Obama answered. “We and the Israeli people have a special bond that’s not going to go away, but friends are going to disagree sometimes … there is a disagreement in terms of how we can move this peace process forward.”
Obama said the announcement on the new settler homes last week was the work of the Interior Ministry in Israel and that Netanyahu had apologized.
And he called on both Israelis and Palestinians to “take steps to make sure that we can rebuild trust.”
The New York Times, meanwhile, reported that the White House was considering proposing a US plan to form the basis of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations as US officials questioned the commitment of Netanyahu’s government to peace talks.
Should Obama present his own proposal, complete with territorial maps, it would likely not take place until his special envoy to the Middle East, George Mitchell, had engaged in several months of US-brokered indirect “proximity” talks between the two sides, the Times said.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, headed to Moscow, for a meeting of the international Quartet on Middle East peace talks, without holding an expected telephone call with Netanyahu.
“We’re still looking forward to a response. It hasn’t happened yet. There hasn’t been a call yet,” Mark Toner, a State Department spokesman, told reporters after Clinton’s departure.
With nightfall in Jerusalem and Clinton flying to Moscow on her US Air Force plane, which has good phone connections, there was no sign the call would happen on Wednesday despite officials’ earlier insistence otherwise.
Netanyahu did speak overnight, however, with Biden, the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem said.
A White House aide would only say that the call was part of “ongoing negotiations.”
In a previous call last week, Clinton told Netanyahu that Israel’s treatment of Biden sent a “deeply negative signal,” just as Washington had persuaded Palestinians to join indirect “proximity” peace talks.
She said on Tuesday Washington was engaged in “very active consultation” with the Israelis over steps that would demonstrate the requisite commitment getting peace talks on again.
Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said demands for a halt to building homes for Jewish settlers in mostly-Arab east Jerusalem were “unreasonable.”
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