Israel: 'Fix Kosovo first before telling us what to do'

LEIGH PHILLIPS <mailto:l...@euobs.com> 

11.10.2010 @ 09:18 CET

Israel's foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman of the hard-right nationalist 
Yisrael Beiteinu party, has bluntly told the foreign ministers of Spain and 
France to fix problems in Europe before telling Israel what to do, according to 
reports in the local press.

"Solve your own problems in Europe before you come to us with complaints. Maybe 
then I will be open to accepting your suggestions," he told France's Bernard 
Kouchner and Spain's Miguel Angel Moratinos at a dinner on Sunday evening (10 
October) in Jerusalem.

Mr Lieberman suggested that Europe is sacrificing Israel the way it abandoned 
Czechoslovakia in 1939 (Photo: the half-blood prince 
<http://euobserver.com/onm/media/file3/4aeb278bdc11.png> )

Description: 
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 Lieberman said that after Europe had solved conflicts in the Caucasus as well 
as the ongoing disputes over Cyprus and Kosovo, then the Jewish state "will 
listen to your advice," reports the conservative Jerusalem Post.

He also suggested that Europe is sacrificing Israel the way it abandoned 
Czechoslovakia in 1939.

"In 1938 Europe placated Hitler, sacrificing Czechoslovakia instead of 
supporting it, and gained nothing from it," he said, according to Haaretz, the 
left-leaning Israeli daily.

"We will not be the Czechoslovakia of 2010, we will stand up for Israel's vital 
interests."

Mr Lieberman suggested that the international community was trying to 
compensate for its failures elsewhere in the world by pushing for a peace deal 
between Israel and the Palestinians.

"What about the struggle in Somalia, North Korea, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and 
Sudan?" he continued. 

"Instead of talking now with the Arab League about the future of a referendum 
in Sudan, or discussing the explosive situation in Iraq in 2012, the 
international community is applying great pressure on Israel."

The strong words came as Mr Kouchner reportedly signalled that the creation of 
a Palestinian state may have to come via the United Nations Security Council if 
peace negotiations falter.

In an interview with Palestinian paper Al-Ayyam, the French minister said that 
Paris would prefer a two-state solution to be agreed by both sides, but that 
the former option could not be ruled out.

"We want to be able to soon welcome the state of Palestine to the United 
Nations. This is the hope and the desire of the international community, and 
the sooner that can happen the better," he said.

"The international community cannot be satisfied with a prolonged deadlock. I 
therefore believe that one cannot rule out in principle the Security Council 
option," he said.

"But the establishment of the Palestinian state must come as a result of the 
peace process and be the fruit of bilateral negotiations."

The two ministers also met with President Shimon Peres, Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu, defence minister Ehud Barak and Tzipi Livni, a former foreign 
minister and leader of the opposition centrist Kadima party.

The other government leaders told the two Europeans that the international 
community must be flexible over the issue of a freeze on the construction of 
settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.

The Israeli government has refused to extend a 10-month partial freeze that 
ended in September on new settlement building, illegal under international law.

Over the weekend, Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas said to Arab foreign 
ministers that his side would consider a request before the UN Security Council 
if the peace talks collapse as a result of the settlement issue.

The Israeli defence minister, Ehud Barak, of the centre-left Labour Party, was 
reportedly more cordial with the two European ministers.

"They both take a lot of time working towards a real European contribution to 
peace between Israel and the Palestinians," he said.

"I know that they are both friends of Israel, and they are respected by the 
Palestinians and throughout the Arab world. Therefore, they can really help."

 

http://euobserver.com/9/31011

http://euobserver.com/9/31011

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