President Obama is holding newly-re-elected Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to comments he made in the run-up to election day, in which he abandoned his support for a two-state solution, according to an interview with The Huffington Post.
“We’ve taken [Netanyahu] at his word when he said that it wouldn’t happen during his prime ministership, and so that’s why we’ve got to evaluate what other options are available to make sure that we don’t see a chaotic situation in the region,” Obama said Friday.
On the eve of election day, Netanyahu said in an interview with the NRG news website, “I think that anyone who moves to establish a Palestinian state today, and evacuate areas, is giving radical Islam an area from which to attack the State of Israel,” according to The Times of Israel.
Under heavy criticism, Netanyahu walked back those comments during his first American television interview post-election, saying that he hasn’t.
“I don’t want a one-state solution. I want a two-state solution,” Netanyahu told NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent Andrea Mitchell. When Mitchell reminded Netanyahu that he was “elected on a mandate against a two-state solution,” and that the White House was interpreting it as such, Netanyahu said that a two-state solution is not possible unless Palestinians abandon Hamas.
Related: 5 things to know from Netanyahu’s first post-election interview
The Israeli Ambassador to the United States doubled down on Netanyahu’s post-election position on “Meet the Press” Sunday, and suggested that the White House is “misinterpreting” Netanyahu’s pre-election interview as a stand against a two-state solution.
“He didn’t say what the president and others seem to suggest that he’s saying,” Ambassador Ron Dermer told moderator Chuck Todd. “Our concern, Chuck, is that a Palestinian state today would be a terrorist state.”









