Google – AFP, Stephen Collinson (AFP), 21 March 2013
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Barack
Obama speaks on US, Israel and Mideast relations on March 21, 2013
in Israel
(AFP, Saul Loeb)
|
JERUSALEM —
In a powerful direct appeal to Israelis, President Barack Obama Thursday
insisted a two-state peace with the Palestinians could still be forged and was
their only hope of true security.
In a
trademark soaring address, Obama also built on his vow of an
"eternal" defence of the Jewish state in the face of Iran's nuclear
programme, which has been at the centerpiece of his first trip to the country
as US president.
Obama
declared that "Israel is at a crossroads" as he sought to convince
young Israelis to reshape the internal political dynamics which have seen peace
talks frozen for two years.
"Peace
is necessary. Indeed it is the only path to true security," Obama told an
exuberant audience at a Jerusalem conference centre.
"You
can be the generation that permanently secures the Zionist dream," Obama
said, warning that a two-state solution was the only way to ensure Israel
remained a Jewish state amid changing demographics.
Hours after
taking a helicopter ride into the West Bank, over barbed wire fences and the
walls of Israel's anti-militant barrier, Obama urged his young Israeli audience
to "look at the world through (Palestinian) eyes."
At a state
dinner later in his Jerusalem residence, President Shimon Peres told his guest
that he was "moved by the way in which you spoke to the hearts of the
young Israelis."
Earlier,
Obama's edgy news conference with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in
Ramallah reflected Palestinian disappointment with his failure to live up to
first-term vows to help forge a Palestinian state.
The frosty
atmosphere lacked the bonhomie of the bonding session he held with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday, as the two leaders, both
setting off on new mandates, sought to prove their prickly relationship was a
thing of the past.
In Ramallah
Obama condemned the "continuing threat" of attacks from the Hamas-run
Gaza Strip after two rockets hit southern Israel, near the town of Sderot.
The United
Nations also joined the condemnation: "We condemn all rocket fire and call
for it to stop," a UN statement said.
In front of
Abbas, Obama said that the two-state solution was still a possibility, despite
claims that Israeli settlement building had crushed Palestinian dreams of a
contiguous state.
Although he
singled out Israeli settlements on lands Palestinians see as part of their
future state as a major impediment to reviving peace talks, Obama did not call
for a new construction ban.
Abbas was
less hazy on the question in private talks with Obama, according to his
political adviser Nimr Hammad.
"A
resumption of negotiations is not possible without an Israeli settlement freeze
in the West Bank and east Jerusalem," Hammad told AFP.
Israel says
it will not come back to talks with pre-conditions.
Obama came
to the Middle East amid tepid expectations, promising not to table grand plans
but to assess the prospects for progress.
But the
striking ambition of his speech will be sure to raise expectations of a new US
intervention to revive the peace process.
Obama made
similar calls for movement in Middle East talks in 2009 with his seminal Cairo
speech -- but failed to live up to the expectations he generated, as the peace
moves crashed.
Officials
said Obama would send Secretary of State John Kerry back to Israel on Saturday
to follow up on his visit with Israeli leaders.
A statement
from the office of Netanyahu, who heads a new governing coalition, thanked
Obama for his "unreserved" support for Israel and agreed on the need
for peace with the Palestinians.
But newly
appointed cabinet minister Naftali Bennett, leader of the far-right Jewish Home
party, was scathing.
"Obama's
words certainly came out of a concern for Israel and from true friendship but
we experienced the results of our previous withdrawal this morning in Sderot
and in the thousands of victims during past years," he wrote on his
Facebook page. "A Palestinian state is not the right way."
Obama also
urged foreign states to blacklist Lebanon's Hezbollah for its attacks on
Israelis.
"Every
country that values justice should call Hezbollah what it truly is -- a
terrorist organisation," he said in remarks aimed at the European Union.
Obama also
issued a fresh call for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to leave power as the
bloody uprising against his regime, which the UN estimates has so far claimed
70,000 lives, enters its third year.
With
Netanyahu on Wednesday, Obama warned that any use by Assad of chemical weapons
would be a "game-changer" that would lead to international action.
And he
issued a fresh warning to Iran, stressing that the time for pursuing a
diplomatic resolution to its controversial nuclear program was "not
unlimited."
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Barack Obama's speech in Jerusalem – full text
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Obama's Jerusalem speech interrupted by heckler: 'it makes me feel at home' - New
Barack Obama's speech in Jerusalem – full text
Obama vows 'eternal' defence of Israel
“… Let us talk about the swords: When you hear the word sword, the first thing that occurs to you is battle. The Bridge of Swords is a battle and we told you that as well. Swords are metaphoric and they mean many things, so let us describe the things we mean them to say to you.
Number one: They are indeed a weapon in a battle. There is a battle coming. "Kryon, does that mean there's going to be a war?" Potentially, yes. Right now we will tell you that the Middle East cooks itself. You've noticed, haven't you? What do you know about the Middle East, dear one? Let's start examining things for a moment. What energy did you grow up in? What was the energy of the Middle East? In the '40s, what was the energy? With the establishment of the state of Israel, you built a wall of hate, both sides. The wall was so thick that the children of both sides were taught to hate one another as soon as they were able to understand the language. They were told who their enemies were. Now, where were you then?
Some of you weren't here yet. By the time you arrived, in your youth, were you aware of the Middle East? Not particularly. "What's the hatred about?" you might ask. What if I told you it's about a family feud? Two sons of a Jewish master are involved. One founded the Arabs and one remained a Jew. They don't want to hear this, but they are all Jews. (Don't tell them this.)
If you look at the lineage, it's pretty obvious and yet it's a complete and total set-up for either solution or war. The set-up would have this world ending in a conflagration that would have been brought about by this hatred. That's in the prophecy of Nostradamus and your scripture, but it is no longer the prophecy of the planet. Yet the hatred still exists. The hatred is as great today as it was then, but where was all the terrorism 40 years ago? It was isolated.
Those in Israel and Palestine and surrounding areas took the brunt of it, but now it's seemingly everywhere - and you're worried. Why would this be? The answer is that the old energy was happy to have this hatred contained, for it would keep it going and never involve outsiders. Outsiders tend to bring unwanted light to the party. Suddenly, the whole earth is involved and can see the entire scenario before them. The old guard wants war, just like all the eons before them. The ones on the bridge are holding the light and showing the earth how to cross. Even many younger ones in Israel and Palestine and Iran are holding light! It's all around the old guard and they are furious, for they are losing the "battle of hatred." …”
Number one: They are indeed a weapon in a battle. There is a battle coming. "Kryon, does that mean there's going to be a war?" Potentially, yes. Right now we will tell you that the Middle East cooks itself. You've noticed, haven't you? What do you know about the Middle East, dear one? Let's start examining things for a moment. What energy did you grow up in? What was the energy of the Middle East? In the '40s, what was the energy? With the establishment of the state of Israel, you built a wall of hate, both sides. The wall was so thick that the children of both sides were taught to hate one another as soon as they were able to understand the language. They were told who their enemies were. Now, where were you then?
Some of you weren't here yet. By the time you arrived, in your youth, were you aware of the Middle East? Not particularly. "What's the hatred about?" you might ask. What if I told you it's about a family feud? Two sons of a Jewish master are involved. One founded the Arabs and one remained a Jew. They don't want to hear this, but they are all Jews. (Don't tell them this.)
If you look at the lineage, it's pretty obvious and yet it's a complete and total set-up for either solution or war. The set-up would have this world ending in a conflagration that would have been brought about by this hatred. That's in the prophecy of Nostradamus and your scripture, but it is no longer the prophecy of the planet. Yet the hatred still exists. The hatred is as great today as it was then, but where was all the terrorism 40 years ago? It was isolated.
Those in Israel and Palestine and surrounding areas took the brunt of it, but now it's seemingly everywhere - and you're worried. Why would this be? The answer is that the old energy was happy to have this hatred contained, for it would keep it going and never involve outsiders. Outsiders tend to bring unwanted light to the party. Suddenly, the whole earth is involved and can see the entire scenario before them. The old guard wants war, just like all the eons before them. The ones on the bridge are holding the light and showing the earth how to cross. Even many younger ones in Israel and Palestine and Iran are holding light! It's all around the old guard and they are furious, for they are losing the "battle of hatred." …”

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