by Adi Mintz
The Obama administration, however, has endorsed the Palestinian narrative in full. As far as Obama is concerned, the Palestinian demand for a comprehensive moratorium on settlement construction includes the entire area beyond the Green Line.
Every so often, 
information about how U.S. President Barack Obama's administration seeks
 to undermine Israel and its government finds its way to the public. 
Most recently, this was inadvertently evidenced in a report by Haaretz 
journalist Barak Ravid, which stated that a review of the list of 
officials regularly invited to the White House revealed that Israeli 
Ambassador Ron Dermer was not among them.
The visitors' registry 
further revealed that while official Israeli delegates were essentially 
snubbed by the White House, the American president's aides regularly 
meet with individuals representing the radical Israeli Left.
Ravid reported that, at
 the end of October 2014, "There was a visit by the head of the Geneva 
Initiative group, Gadi Baltiansky, followed the next day by a visit by 
the head of Friends of the Earth Middle East, Gidon Bromberg. They met 
separately with Maher Bitar, director of Israeli-Palestinian affairs at 
the White House." 
Ravid continued that on
 Dec. 2, "left-wing activist Danny Zeidman, whose main interest is 
problems related to Jerusalem, met with adviser Gordon. On Dec. 9, 
attorney Michael Sfard from the Yesh Din human rights group met NSC 
Mideast adviser Lempert."
When former Prime 
Minister Ehud Olmert was still a Likud MK, he once referred to Zeidman 
as "an agent of the Palestinian Authority," whose association was funded
 by European governments. Michael Sfard had worked with the Al-Haq 
organization, an independent Palestinian human-rights group, which is 
also funded by European governments, and conducts lawfare against 
Israel.
The nuclear deal 
negotiated between world powers and Iran has once again raised questions
 over Obama's motives. It is unlikely his actions are rooted in 
anti-Semitism, as some would argue, but rather stem from a radical 
viewpoint. 
The U.S. has never 
sanctioned Israeli settlement activity in Judea and Samaria, and 
throughout the years, it seems Israel has failed to properly assert the 
narrative of the Jewish people's exclusive right to its land and its 
sovereignty over it, and has failed to debunk the myth of the 
"occupation."
Nevertheless, both Bill
 Clinton's and George W. Bush's administrations accepted the fact that 
Israel has a tangible hold on east Jerusalem and the settlement blocs. 
Bush, who endorsed the so-called "Road Map" and "vision" of Palestinian 
statehood, even entrusted former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's senior 
adviser Dov Weisglass with a letter acknowledging Israel's sovereignty 
over those areas, while still debating the true meaning of "natural 
growth" in the settlements.
The Obama 
administration, however, has endorsed the Palestinian narrative in full.
 As far as Obama is concerned, the Palestinian demand for a 
comprehensive moratorium on settlement construction includes the entire 
area beyond the Green Line.
Unfortunately, 
Jerusalem has yielded to Washington's pressure in this matter, even 
curbing construction projects in east Jerusalem. Obama shares the views 
of the anti-Zionist Left in Israel, which is why he is fighting Prime 
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over every home built in the Gilo and Ramot 
neighborhoods of Jerusalem.
Obama's worldview, it 
seems, does not recognize the Jewish people's national and historic 
rights. As far as Obama is concerned, Israel is a nation of immigrants, 
whose establishment -- as he said in his 2009 Cairo speech -- was the 
price the world had to pay following the murder of 6 million Jews in 
Europe, but it cannot come at the expense of the Palestinians.
Given this perception, 
Israel must strive to shift the focus of the conversation back to the 
issue of rights, and offer a moral alternative. The strong ties that 
bind the U.S. and Israel are not solely rooted in the administration, 
but also derive their strength from American public opinion, and the 
hundreds of lawmakers on Capitol Hill who do not share the White House's
 radical views. 
Adi Mintz is the former CEO of 
the Yesha Council, the umbrella organization of municipal councils of 
Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria.
                    Adi Mintz
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=12321
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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