ktlight
1st June 2011, 08:29
FYI:
US President Barack Obama's recent speech at the annual American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) not only failed to bring a solution to the Middle East crisis, but also sparked outrage among the region's Muslims nations.
The speech did not address the nations in the region, but rather aimed at gaining the Zionist lobby's support in the United States.
In his address, the US president openly stressed his country's commitment to the Israeli regime's security.
Ahead of the US presidential election, Obama made an attempt at the annual AIPAC meeting to win the approval of Zionist lobby leaders.
The US president's presence in the meeting revealed many of the behind-the-curtain associations between the United States and the Zionist regime.
The conference further proved that no president in the United States can easily enter the White House unless they win the support of the powerful Zionist lobby.
US-Israel ties have always been considered as one of the most complicated axes of the United States' foreign policy, with the relations directly influencing all political affairs in the Middle East.
Undoubtedly, since the presidency of Harry S. Truman -- in office when the Israeli regime was forged -- no US president has ever passed into the White House unless through the channel of AIPAC.
Obama's recent speech at the AIPAC meeting was in a clear contrast with his earlier remarks at the US State Department. This paradox in Obama's political terminology indicates that the US president has formally embarked on his electoral campaign.
Arabs and Palestinians did not take the remarks really seriously, but there will be no hope for the formation of an independent Palestinian state if the US future foreign policy should be based on this speech.
The White House's biased policy toward the issue of Palestine will lead to an escalation of violence in the Middle East in the future.
A reconciliation accord between Hamas and Fatah indicates the disappointment of both movements with the US policies to resolve the problems of the Palestinian nation.
These two movements have tried all the ways to establish an independent Palestinian state during the past three decades, but the US and Israeli leaders seem to be unwilling to resolve Palestine's crisis in a peaceful manner.
source to read more
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/181885.html
US President Barack Obama's recent speech at the annual American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) not only failed to bring a solution to the Middle East crisis, but also sparked outrage among the region's Muslims nations.
The speech did not address the nations in the region, but rather aimed at gaining the Zionist lobby's support in the United States.
In his address, the US president openly stressed his country's commitment to the Israeli regime's security.
Ahead of the US presidential election, Obama made an attempt at the annual AIPAC meeting to win the approval of Zionist lobby leaders.
The US president's presence in the meeting revealed many of the behind-the-curtain associations between the United States and the Zionist regime.
The conference further proved that no president in the United States can easily enter the White House unless they win the support of the powerful Zionist lobby.
US-Israel ties have always been considered as one of the most complicated axes of the United States' foreign policy, with the relations directly influencing all political affairs in the Middle East.
Undoubtedly, since the presidency of Harry S. Truman -- in office when the Israeli regime was forged -- no US president has ever passed into the White House unless through the channel of AIPAC.
Obama's recent speech at the AIPAC meeting was in a clear contrast with his earlier remarks at the US State Department. This paradox in Obama's political terminology indicates that the US president has formally embarked on his electoral campaign.
Arabs and Palestinians did not take the remarks really seriously, but there will be no hope for the formation of an independent Palestinian state if the US future foreign policy should be based on this speech.
The White House's biased policy toward the issue of Palestine will lead to an escalation of violence in the Middle East in the future.
A reconciliation accord between Hamas and Fatah indicates the disappointment of both movements with the US policies to resolve the problems of the Palestinian nation.
These two movements have tried all the ways to establish an independent Palestinian state during the past three decades, but the US and Israeli leaders seem to be unwilling to resolve Palestine's crisis in a peaceful manner.
source to read more
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/181885.html