"
America can't ever be neutral when it comes to
Israel's security or survival,"
Clinton said. "Some things aren't negotiable."
Clinton
AIPAC Hillary Clinton addresses AIPAC in
Washington DC. (photo credit:screenshot) WASHINGTON --
Donald J. Trump has "no business" being president of the
United States if he is neutral on the issue of
Palestinian terrorism,
Hillary Rodham Clinton said on Monday, in an aggressive and concerted attack against the
GOP frontrunner at the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee's annual policy conference. Clinton, likely the
Democratic presidential nominee, appealed to the liberal democratic inclinations of 18,
000 pro-Israel activists gathered here, targeting
Trump's "bigotry" and "bullying" while underscoring the need for steady hands in a world full of perils. Tweets from https://twitter.com/Jerusalem_Post/lists/aipac
"America can't ever be neutral when it comes to Israel's security or survival," Clinton said. "Some things aren't negotiable."
Clinton, former first lady, senator from
New York and secretary of state, recounted her experience with victims of
Palestinian attacks.
The US cannot be neutral on the issue, she said, because "in Israel's story, we see our own, and the stories of all people who struggled for freedom and self-determination."
Her assault on Trump– a substantial portion of her speech– received repeated and enthusiastic applause from the crowd.
Accusing Trump of being "neutral on Monday, pro-Israel on Tuesday and who knows what on Wednesday," Clinton said that, "for the security of Israel and the world, we need America to remain a respected global leader."
Trump, a real estate tycoon, media personality and leading
Republican presidential candidate, has said he would remain "neutral" between Israel and the
Palestinians in order to clinch the "deal of all deals"– a two-state solution. He will speak to AIPAC's confab on Monday evening, along with rivals
Ohio Governor John Kasich and
Texas Senator Ted Cruz.
Clinton also outlined her own position on the recent wave of violence against
Israeli and
American civilians in the country, explicitly condemning
Palestinian leadership for "inciting violence" and for failing to condemn the killing. "These attacks must end immediately," she said.
While she briefly acknowledged differences with the
Israeli government on stalled
peace efforts with Palestinian leadership, she repeated her opposition to any political process imposed by outside parties– "including by the
UN Security Council," she said.
The
Obama administration and the
French government are reportedly considering a resolution that would codify parameters of a two-state solution in the
Security Council chamber.
Echoing
Vice President Joseph Biden's speech to AIPAC the night before, Clinton noted the potential for convergence between Israel and the
Arab world on a host of security issues
. If the Arab League can designate all of
Hezbollah as a terrorist organization, so too can
Europe, she charged, once again to applause.
Above all else,
Iran's policies region-wide have brought together Israel and its
Arab neighbors around common security threats– and while Clinton said that the nuclear deal reached last summer would put a "lid" on the
Islamic Republic's nuclear work, she said she would be uniquely strict in enforcing the deal as president.
"There's a big
difference between talking about holding Iran accountable and actually doing it," she said, adding that force remains on the table should
Tehran significantly violate the pact. And she called for a "significant response" to Iran's continued ballistic missile work.
Clinton expressed concern over the rising tide of anti-Semitism afflicting Europe, embodied by the boycott, divest and sanction (
BDS) movement. One line particularly well-received in the hall was on her rebuke of those boycotting Israel's scientists, intellectuals and students, which she characterized as anti-Semitic bullying.
Her speech was yet another indication that Clinton is pivoting from the primary campaign against
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who trails her in delegates to the
Democratic national convention.
Clinton suggested that, as president, her
White House would approach the US-Israel relationship with gentler hands than has the Obama administration, which has had an historically fractious relationship with the government of
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
One of her first orders of business would be to invite Netanyahu to the
Oval Office, Clinton said, and dispatch a delegation from the
Pentagon and the
Joint Chiefs of Staff to Israel for defense consultations.
"We will never allow Israel's adversaries to think a wedge can be driven between us," she said. "Ceding the mantle of leadership" in the
Middle East, she added, "is not an option."
- published: 21 Mar 2016
- views: 11814