Israel’s Incoming Government Could Clash With Obama Administration

JERUSALEM, March 20 — The foreign minister of Israel’s incoming government lives in a and will begin life as a diplomat battling the perception that he is anti-Arab.

A leading contender to become once characterized the two-state solution that forms the basis of U.S. and international policy toward Israel and the Palestinians as “a story the Western world tells with Western eyes.” And the potential make-or-break votes in the country’s new parliamentary coalition belong to legislators from religious parties that would like to expand settlement construction in the occupied West Bank.

The coalition that will make up Israel’s next government is not yet final. On Friday, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu received permission to extend negotiations for two more weeks in hopes of reaching agreements with some of the country’s more moderate parties and forging a broader-based in the 120-seat parliament. But Netanyahu thus far has not been able to strike deals with those parties, instead pulling from conservative and religious factions to create a narrow majority that seems tailor-made for conflict with the Obama administration, which supports a Palestinian state and is expected to push for progress on drawing its borders. Netanyahu is himself a skeptic when it comes to Palestinian statehood and has referred to U.S.-backed as a waste of time.
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While Netanyahu has compromised in past dealings with Washington — an earlier term as prime minister was cut short after he made land concessions at the urging of – his still-to-be-finalized coalition partners may not leave him much room to maneuver.

“The more narrow the government the more difficult it will be for Netanyahu to make some gesture towards the U.S.,” said Gerald Steinberg, chairman of the political science department at Bar-Ilan University outside Tel Aviv. On issues such as settlements, if pressure comes from Washington, “it is likely to lead to a major confrontation.”

Source: washingtonpost.com

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