President Barack Obama is rejecting talk that U.S.-Israel relations are in a  meltdown. Relations have been strained since administration officials delivered  rare harsh public rebukes after an Israeli announcement of approval of new  housing units in East Jerusalem during Vice President Joseph Biden’s visit there  last week. 
Asked in a Fox News interview Wednesday whether the falling  out amounted to a “crisis,” Obama said flatly, “No.” 
“Israel’s one of  our closest allies and we and the Israeli people have a special bond that’s not  going to go away. But friends are going to disagree sometimes,” the president  said. “There is a disagreement in terms of how we can move this peace process  forward…The actions that were taken by the Interior Minister in Israel weren’t  helpful to that process, Prime Minister Netanyahu acknowledged as much and  apologized for it.” 
Obama insisted that despite the highly-public  criticism of Israel by various U.S. officials, including Biden and Secretary of  State Hillary Clinton, the U.S. is being fair to both sides. 
“Yesterday,  when there were riots by the Palestinians against a synagogue that had been  reopened we condemned them in the same way because what we need right now is  both sides to recognize that it is in their interests to move this peace process  forward,” Obama told Fox. 
During a hallway exchange that followed a  lengthier interview on health care reform, Obama was also asked if his foreign  policy would be “a failure” if Iran manages to build a nuclear weapon.  
“It is one of our highest priorities to make sure that Iran doesn’t  possess a nuclear weapon. That is why I’ve worked so hard to mobilize the  international community, successfully, to isolate Iran,” the president said.  
Obama acknowledged that his early ambitions of drawing the Iranian  regime to the negotiating table have met with little success. 
“The  Iranian government has been more concerned about preventing their people from  exercising their democratic and human rights than trying to solve this problem  diplomatically. That’s why we’re going to go after aggressive sanctions,” the  president said. 
Obama said he hasn’t “taken any options off the table”  for resolving the nuclear impasse. “It’s a problem we need to solve because, if  Iran gets a nuclear weapon, you could potentially see a nuclear arms race  throughout the Middle East and that would be tremendously damaging to our  national security interests,” he said.
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 Thursday, March 18, 2010
Obama on Israel: Friends disagree
Obama on Israel: Friends disagree