Israel's Netanyahu pulls his punches after Sanders calls him a racist
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[February 27, 2020]
By Jeffrey Heller
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday Bernie Sanders was wrong
to call him a racist during a debate among contenders for the U.S.
Democratic presidential nomination, but shied away from attacking the
senator in return.
"I am not intervening in the U.S. election," Netanyahu replied when
asked on Israeli Army Radio about what an interviewer termed Sanders'
personal attack on him at Tuesday's event in Charleston, South Carolina.
Sanders, who has been critical of the right-wing leader's policy toward
Palestinians, described Netanyahu as "a reactionary racist who is now
running" Israel.
Pressed further for his thoughts about Sanders, who if elected would be
the first Jewish president in U.S. history, Netanyahu said: "What I
think about this matter is that he is definitely wrong. No question
about it."
Asked about possible confrontation with Sanders should the
self-described democratic socialist win the White House, Netanyahu said
that as prime minister he had stood up to U.S. presidential opposition
to his policies before and would be able to do so again.
Netanyahu had a contentious relationship with Barack Obama, Republican
Donald Trump's predecessor as president, with the Iranian nuclear deal
and Israel's settlement policy in the occupied West Bank main areas of
friction.
Israel's longest-serving leader, Netanyahu is fighting for his political
survival in a national election on Monday, the country's third in less
than a year after inconclusive ballots in April and September.
During the campaign, Netanyahu has steered clear of commenting directly
on the U.S. election.
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he speaks at a
regional council chairpersons' conference in Kiryat Anavim, Israel
February 26, 2020. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun
But he has praised Trump as the best friend Israel has ever had in
the White House, noting the president's decisions to withdraw from
the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital
and move the U.S. embassy to the city.
Netanyahu has also tried to play on many Israelis' suspicions about
the loyalty of Israel's 21 percent Arab minority, political analysts
say.
The right-wing Likud party leader says his main challenger, former
general Benny Gantz, would need the support of an Arab party to form
a governing coalition, effectively tying his hands in pursuing any
military action in the region.
The tactic forced Gantz to deny that a government led by his
centrist Blue and White party would rely on the Joint List, an Arab
coalition mostly supported by descendants of Palestinians who lived
in what became Israel after its creation in 1948.
Israel's Arab community has long accused Netanyahu, in power from
1996-1999 and since 2009, of fear-mongering. On election day in 2015
Netanyahu urged his voters to turn out, warning that Arabs were
flocking to the polls "in droves."
Netanyahu, who held a campaign rally in an Arab town on Wednesday,
has said he has no dispute with the Arab public in general, only
with Arab politicians pursuing policies he opposes.
(Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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