Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday assured US President Barack Obama that he remained committed to a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as they sought to mend ties strained by acrimony over Middle East diplomacy and Iran.
Meeting Obama for the first time since the signing of the Iran nuclear deal, Netanyahu said he backed a vision of “two states for two peoples,” but maintained that any Palestinian state must be demilitarized and recognize Israel as the homeland of the Jewish people, a condition Palestinians have rejected.
Patching up relations could help smooth the way for a new 10-year US military aid package, which Obama told Netanyahu he wanted to get a “head start” on negotiating.
Israel, Washington’s chief Middle East ally, is seeking a record US$5 billion per year, according to US congressional sources.
A senior Israeli official confirmed that figure and said a US delegation would visit Israel next month to discuss details of an aid package.
Obama and Netanyahu, who have a history of testy White House encounters, showed no outward sign of tension, looking cordial and businesslike as they held their first face-to-face talks in 13 months.
The meeting was clouded by Palestinian stabbing and shooting attacks that have Israelis on edge at a time when Obama has concluded that a peace deal is beyond reach during the final 14 months of his presidency.
Obama condemned the latest wave of Palestinian violence and backed Israel’s right to defend itself, but said he wanted to hear Netanyahu’s ideas for lowering tensions and “how we can make sure that legitimate Palestinian aspirations are met.”
Netanyahu’s re-commitment to the two-state solution, the bedrock of US diplomacy on the conflict for decades, could satisfy the Obama administration’s desire that he clarify his position after he appeared to backtrack on his pledge during his hard-fought re-election campaign earlier this year.
“I want to make it clear that we have not given up our hope for peace,” Netanyahu told reporters at the start of talks with Obama.
US-sponsored peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians collapsed last year. The eruption of violence between the two sides last month has made an end to that bloodshed a more immediate priority.
The Obama-Netanyahu meeting was widely seen as an effort to move beyond differences over how to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and tensions over US-led nuclear diplomacy with Iran.
Netanyahu later told the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank that while he and Obama had disagreed over the Iranian nuclear deal, now that it has been negotiated, “we are in agreement that we want to keep Iran’s feet to the fire.”
The Israeli prime minister said he also made clear to Obama that Israel would not be “obliged” by any deal to settle the Syrian civil war that does not prevent Iran from using Syrian territory for direct aggression against Israel or for sending game-changing weapons to Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon.
“The defense of Israel is what concerns me in Syria first and foremost, and on that we’ll continue to act forcefully,” he said.
Although Obama and Netanyahu sought to play down their disagreements, no one expected the two leaders would have much success in overcoming their poor personal chemistry.
This time, neither leader wanted a diplomatic blow-up. Netanyahu leaned forward listening intently as Obama spoke, sometimes nodding. Obama, his legs crossed, sometime cradled his chin in one hand. The two exchanged smiles at times and shook hands twice for the cameras.
The meeting was seen as an important step in negotiations for a new US defense aid pact, which could help burnish the right-wing prime minister’s security credentials, challenged by the violence at home.
Israel receives US$3.1 billion from the US annually and is seeking a total of US$50 billion over a decade for the next package, congressional officials told reporters.
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