In a meeting with Senate Democrats, top pro-Israel leaders endorsed
the Obama administration’s latest Israeli-Palestinian peace bid and
warned that the recent Iranian election was of little consequence.
Michael Kassen, the president of the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee, began his talk at the meeting Wednesday with what
participants said was a “hearty” endorsement of the efforts by U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry to restart the talks.
Kerry earlier this month, in an address to the American Jewish
Committee, had asked for Jewish support in advancing the peace process,
which he has said is critical to reconvene in the coming months. He is
arriving in Jordan this week for another round of meetings with Israeli
and Palestinian officials.
According to participants who described the off-the-record meeting in
the Capitol, Kassen said much of the burden of reviving the talks lies
with the Palestinian Authority, which has resisted returning to the
talks until Israel freezes settlement expansion.
Also endorsing the process was Rabbi Steve Gutow, who directs the
Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the umbrella Jewish public policy
body. Gutow delivered the opening overview of Jewish community concerns.
Debra DeLee, the president of Americans for Peace Now, thanked Kassen and Gutow for endorsing the process.
Kassen and Robert Sugarman, the newly installed chairman of the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, the
community’s foreign policy umbrella, also dismissed the likelihood of
change in Iran now that a relative moderate, Hassan Rohani, has been
elected. They noted Rohani’s deep ties to the establishment, as well as
the fact that real power in the country lies with the religious leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khameini.
Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.), one of 23 senators attending the meeting,
replied that it was worth watching how Rohani’s election played out. He
said the Senate and the administration remained focused on Iran and
sought to exhaust sanctions and other non-military means of forcing Iran
to make more transparent its nuclear program.
Rohani says he is opposed to reducing uranium enrichment, a key
Israeli and American demand, but is open to making Iran’s nuclear
program, which he says is peaceful, more transparent.
The senators and the Jewish groups discussed an array of domestic
issues, including spending cuts to social service programs, said Gutow,
who spoke to JTA according to rules that allowed participants to discuss
their own remarks.
Thursday, 27 June 2013
AIPAC, other pro-Israel leaders at Senate meet laud Kerry initiative
Posted @ 16:58
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment