The US National Security Advisor Susan Rice has rapped
Israeli officials for comments directed at Secretary of State John Kerry over
the ongoing peace process with the Palestinians.
Tweeting from her own Twitter account in the early hours of
Tuesday morning, Rice defended Secretary of State John Kerry in the latest row,
and lashed out over "unfounded and unacceptable" attacks against him.
Kerry, who is the driving force behind the negotiations that
began last summer, warned on Saturday that moves to boycott Israel could gain
momentum should the peace process fail.
A series of Israeli officials,
including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, appeared to understand that Kerry
was advocating a boycott, and responded accordingly.
"The attempts to boycott the State of Israel are not
moral or justified," Netanyahu said at a cabinet meeting Sunday.
Strategic
Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz called Kerry's comments "offensive, unfair
and intolerable," while Economy Minister Naftali Bennett said that Israel
expects its friends "to stand beside us, against anti-Semitic boycott
efforts targeting Israel, and not for them to be their amplifier."
But Rice hit back with a series of tweets that began by
calling out Israeli officials who had criticized Kerry for his remarks.
Kerry's State Department had sharp words Sunday and Monday
in the wake of Netanyahu's comments at the cabinet meeting, rejecting claims
that he had advocated for a boycott.
"Secretary Kerry has a proud record of over three
decades of steadfast support for Israel's security and well-being, including
staunch opposition to boycotts," said a statement from State Department
spokeswoman Jen Psaki on Sunday.
"Secretary Kerry has always expected
opposition and difficult moments in the process, but he also expects all
parties to accurately portray his record and statements."
On Monday, Psaki said that Kerry "has consistently been
opposed to any form of boycott," stressing that any implications that
Kerry is anti-Israel or anti-Semitic were "absolutely incorrect." She
added that, "There is no greater advocate – or opponent, I should say, to
boycotts or proponent of Israel's security and their future."
The row over Kerry's comments is not the first time that
Israeli officials have drawn American ire during the current negotiations.
Ynet
revealed last month that Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon had dismissed security
proposals put together by Kerry as "not worth the paper they are written
on", and called the secretary of state "obsessive" and
"messianic" in his approach to the peace process.
Ya'alon apologized
in the wake of the ensuing diplomatic uproar, and Netanyahu personally
intervened with senior members of the American administration.
Kerry is not the only person who has warned of a looming
increase in boycotts. Israeli business and political leaders have been vocal
about their concerns on this matter.
Last month, a delegation of captains of
industry flew to the annual international business conference in Davos to warn
Netanyahu that maintaining a growing and stable economy requires Israel to make
peace with Palestinians.
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