Israeli President Rivlin: Netanyahu’s Anti-Iran Drive Isolates Israel

I have told him, and I’m telling him again, that strug­gles, even those that are just, can ulti­mate­ly come at Israel’s expense.”

Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, right, speak during an event following the first session of the newly-elected Knesset in Jerusalem, Tuesday, March 31, 2015. (AP Photo/Gali Tibbon, Pool)
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, and Israeli President Reuven Rivlin, right, speak dur­ing an event fol­low­ing the first ses­sion of the new­ly-elect­ed Knesset in Jerusalem, Tuesday, March 31, 2015. (AP Photo/​Gali Tibbon, Pool)

JERUSALEM, Aug 6 (Reuters) — Israel’s pres­i­dent sug­gest­ed on Thursday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been overzeal­ous in oppos­ing the Iran nuclear deal, open­ing a “bat­tle­front” with Washington and iso­lat­ing his coun­try. Reuven Rivlin, who holds the large­ly cer­e­mo­ni­al head of state post, argued in three sep­a­rate news­pa­per inter­views that Netanyahu’s vig­or­ous cam­paign against last mon­th’s nuclear deal between world pow­ers and Iran could ulti­mate­ly hurt Israel. A for­mer right-wing politi­cian with a his­to­ry of strained ties to the prime min­is­ter, Rivlin has voiced his own reser­va­tions about the deal but put it in a wider diplo­mat­ic con­text in the interviews.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, and President Reuven Rivlin, right, attend a ceremony on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem commemorating Ethiopians that died during their immigration to Israel, Sunday, May 17, 2015. Many of the 135,000 members of the Ethiopian community were brought to Israel on secret flights in the mid-1980s and early 1990s. (AP Photo/Baz Ratner, Pool)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, cen­ter, and President Reuven Rivlin, right, attend a cer­e­mo­ny on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem com­mem­o­rat­ing Ethiopians that died dur­ing their immi­gra­tion to Israel, Sunday, May 17, 2015. Many of the 135,000 mem­bers of the Ethiopian com­mu­ni­ty were brought to Israel on secret flights in the mid-1980s and ear­ly 1990s. (AP Photo/​Baz Ratner, Pool)

I am very wor­ried about the bat­tle­front that has opened up between (U.S. President Barack) Obama and Netanyahu and the (state of) rela­tions between the United States and Israel,” he told the Maariv news­pa­per. “The prime min­is­ter has waged a cam­paign against the United States as if the two sides were equal and this is liable to hurt Israel. “I must say that he under­stands the United States bet­ter than I do, but, nonethe­less, we are large­ly iso­lat­ed in the world,” Rivlin said in some of his most crit­i­cal com­ments about Netanyahu’s strat­e­gy on the Iranian issue since becom­ing pres­i­dent a year ago. “I have told him (Netanyahu), and I’m telling him again, that strug­gles, even those that are just, can ulti­mate­ly come at Israel’s expense,” the pres­i­dent told the Haaretz dai­ly. In a speech on Wednesday, Obama defend­ed the agree­ment as a “hard-won diplo­mat­ic solu­tion” that has gained almost unan­i­mous inter­na­tion­al sup­port. Obama acknowl­edged his admin­is­tra­tion’s split with Netanyahu, who has called the deal a threat to Israel’s sur­vival and urged Congress to oppose the accord. But he said that the Israeli leader, though sin­cere, was wrong.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2015. (Dan Balilty/Pool Photo via AP)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks dur­ing a cab­i­net meet­ing in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2015. (Dan Balilty/​Pool Photo via AP)

Netanyahu, in a web­cast to U.S. Jewish groups on Tuesday, said it was his duty to make Israel’s posi­tion heard. “The days when the Jewish peo­ple could not, or would not, speak up for them­selves — those days are over,” Netanyahu said, cau­tion­ing the nuclear deal would not do enough to curb Iranian atom­ic projects with bomb-mak­ing poten­tial. In a third inter­view, this one with the Yedioth Ahronoth news­pa­per, Rivlin urged the prime min­is­ter to patch up his rela­tion­ship with Obama. “I think they have very sim­i­lar per­son­al­i­ties … and it’s not good for them to annoy each oth­er at the expense of the United States and Israel,” he said. (Additional report­ing by Ori Lewis;.
Story orig­i­nat­ed here: Israeli President Rivlin: Netanyahu’s Anti-Iran Drive Isolates Israel