Tuesday, May 25, 2010

PM Netanyahu gets a surprise friendly invite by Obama for a White House meeting next week

(Haaretz).Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will hold another White House meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama next Tuesday, Israeli officials said yesterday.

Netanyahu will meet in Jerusalem with Obama's chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, on Wednesday, who is currently in Israel on vacation. Israeli officials expect that Emanuel will bring the official invitation to next week's meeting with him.

On Thursday, Netanyahu will fly to Paris to participate in a meeting of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, which Israel has just been invited to join.

On Friday, he will arrive in Toronto for meetings with the local Jewish community, and will observe the annual Walk With Israel parade on Sunday before flying to Ottawa, the Canadian capital, for a meeting with Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Monday. He will then head to the United States.

Israeli officials said that Obama wanted to meet with Netanyahu soon, before Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas arrives in Washington for his White House meeting in another few weeks, due to the crisis in relations between Israel and the U.S. and the substantial criticism Obama has taken over it, both from congressmen and from American Jewish leaders.

In recent weeks, the White House has made great efforts to counter this criticism. Last week, Obama met with Jewish congressmen to stress his commitment to Israel's security, while two key aides - Dennis Ross and Dan Shapiro - held similar talks with Jewish leaders. To concretize the administration's commitment to Israel's security, Obama also approved additional funding for Israel's Iron Dome system for defense against short-range rockets.

The Israeli sources said that Washington wants to try to obliterate the memory of the last White House meeting between Obama and Netanyahu. At that meeting, in March, the press was barred and the White House did not even release a joint photo of the two leaders. This treatment - so different from the warm and well-publicized meetings Obama had held with various Arab leaders who visited Washington - was widely viewed as a deliberate attempt to humiliate Netanyahu.

The White House feared the upcoming meeting with Abbas, meant to show Obama's support for the Palestinian leader, would draw unfavorable comparisons with the disastrous March meeting with Netanyahu, thereby deepening the crisis with Israel - and sparking more criticism of Obama's Israel policy. By holding a positive meeting with Netanyahu before Abbas arrives, the administration hopes to deflect such comparisons.

That is why Israeli officials expect that, in contrast to both of Netanyahu's previous meetings with Obama, this one will include a joint photo of the two leaders in the Oval Office and perhaps even a joint press conference.