Robert Naiman, Huffington Post
Democratic
Presidential Nominee Barack Obama "quickly backtracked" from his
remarks in a speech to AIPAC that Jerusalem "must remain undivided," a
statement that had drawn widespread criticism from Palestinians, the Washington Post reports.
In a interview Thursday with CNN, Obama said:
"Well, obviously, it's going to be up to the parties to
negotiate a range of these issues. And Jerusalem will be part of those
negotiations," Obama said when asked whether Palestinians had no future
claim to the city.
Jewish Voice for Peace welcomed
Senator Obama's clarification, noting that his original statement
"undermined the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations that Obama promises to
promote," adding
"Indeed, declaring Jerusalem as Israeli-ruled-only violates
U.S. policy and international standards. It ignores Palestinian claims
to East Jerusalem and the more than 240,000 Palestinian residents
there, while implicitly supporting Israel's continued land
expropriation, demolition of Palestinian homes, and expansion of
settlement building, such as the 900 tenders issued to new housing for
Jewish Israelis in East Jerusalem this week."
While Obama's clarification certainly undoes some of the damage of
his original statement, it's undoubtedly still the case that the net
effect of Senator Obama and Senator McCain's appearances at AIPAC last
week and their remarks there made the prospects of a constructive U.S.
role in promoting Israeli-Palestinian peace more remote.
Indeed, the same day Obama spoke to AIPAC, Palestinian President Abbas called for a resumption of dialogue
between his Fatah movement and Hamas. While in terms of Palestinian
interests, this is a very sensible policy, it's also a symptom of the
breakdown of the current diplomatic process. President Abbas' statement
has been interpreted among Palestinians as an admission that he's not
getting anything out of diplomacy with the U.S. and Israel. Senator
Obama's and Senator McCain's remarks at AIPAC have added weight to the
widespread belief in the region that U.S. policy is beholden to the
right-wing in Israel, there is no prospect of change on the horizon,
and those who wish to secure Palestinian rights will have to look for
friends elsewhere.
Senators Obama and McCain could easily do something about this. They
could take this opportunity to affirm their support for Palestinian
rights, as they have both done in the past -- McCain, most famously,
when in an apparently unscripted burst of empathy he explained to an interviewer his understanding of why Palestinians voted for Hamas in the 2006 Palestinian legislative elections.
If you agree that Senators Obama and McCain should affirm their
support for Palestinian rights, Jewish Voice for Peace and Just Foreign
Policy encourage you to ask them to do so.