Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti-Defamation
League, said Sunday morning that Kerry's "outrageous behavior" will
unite American Jews.
"When there is a crisis the American Jewish community
comes together," Foxman told Army Radio. "I think Kerry's outrageous
behavior will unite the American Jewish community. It is chutzpah to lecture
Israel about the risks of peace and war, and so I think he will help
unite" the community.
Foxman, who is currently in Israel to attend the Jewish
Federations of North America General Assembly, said he does not believe the
recent tensions in Israel-U.S. relations will cast a cloud over the event.
"This is not new. The relationship between the United
States and Israel has had its ups and downs. The good news is that both
countries need each other, the good news is that hamatarot (the goals) are the
same, that is the U.S. and Israel know that the common goal is to stop Iran
from becoming nuclear. The U.S. and Israel want to see peace between the
Israelis and the Palestinians. The question is in the details, and also there
is a question of trust," he said.
He described the current tensions between the allies as a
"crisis of trust," explaining that they had each agreed recently
"not to surprise each other," yet Netanyahu had found out from other
diplomats what had been going on in Geneva, and "not directly, as was
promised."
Kerry spent the past week in the Middle East, during which
he met several times with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The timing of his
visit coincided with the latest round of peace talks between Israel and the
Palestinians, and the negotiations between Iran and world powers over Tehran's
uranium enrichment.
Last month, Foxman criticized American leadership and
resolve in the global arena, saying the world increasingly sees a “weak and
retreating” United States that “cannot be counted on.”
Speaking at the ADL’s Centennial conference in New York,
Foxman expressed apprehension that the U.S. is undergoing a “deep and dangerous
change” that would endanger both Israel’s security and the wellbeing of the
American Jewish community. “It causes me to lose sleep,” he said.
He lambasted Congressional resistance to U.S. President
Barack Obama’s call for a military strike against Syria’s chemical weapons that
resulted in U.S. acceptance of the Russian compromise offer. “A huge sigh of
relief was heard throughout the nation, but what was also heard was questioning
around the world whether America could be counted on.”
And while he didn’t rebuke Obama by name, the
Administration’s attitude towards talks with Iran was also a cause for concern,
he said. “America seems desperate to avoid a confrontation with Iran and the
Iranians, aware of that, are playing it to a fare-thee-well.”
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