Amid mounting criticism, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defended his upcoming visit to the U.S. just weeks before Israelis go to the polls to decide whether to give him another term.
On March 3, the hawkish Israeli leader is set to address the U.S. Congress, speaking on behalf of his State to make the case against negotiating an Iranian nuclear deal. On Sunday, he said “As prime minister of Israel, I am obligated to make every effort to prevent Iran from getting nuclear weaponry that will be aimed at the State of Israel. This effort is global and I will go anywhere I am invited to make the State of Israel’s case and defend its future and existence.”
But the way in which he was invited — and the timing of his visit — has only highlighted difficulties in relations between Netanyahu and President Obama’s administration.
Republican House Speaker John Boehner invited the Israeli leader without notifying the Obama administration — a move the White House is calling a breach of protocol. The trip also comes just two weeks before an Israeli election; his upcoming address has been lambasted as an “election speech.”
A get-tough-with-Iran speech before a friendly Republican-controlled Congress could help Netanyahu’s reelection bid at home and position him as willing to harm relations with the White House in the name of Israel’s own national security interests.
But many Israelis and their American supporters argue that the trip will not impact Iran and will only weaken a U.S.-Israeli allegiance when it is most vital. The very public spat between Netanyahu and the White House, set off by the visit, will be hard for the Iranians to ignore.
White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough on CNN’s “State of the Union” Sunday said that Obama will not meet with Netanyahu during that trip. “The U.S. should stay clear of Israeli politics,” McDonough said.
When Netanyahu first ran for prime minister in 1996, he accused his opponent of carrying out a cynical ploy for visiting Washington just three weeks before that election. “I can’t find an example of any previous Israeli government whose prime minister, on the eve of elections, made a cynical attempt to use relations between Israel and the United States as a party advertisement,” he said at the time. Forced to respond to his decision now to come to Washington, Netanyahu tried to couch it as a national security imperative.
But even longstanding supporters of the prime minister called it inappropriate. It’s unclear how a last-minute trip to Washington before the election will impact the possibility of Iran obtaining a nuclear weapon.
Related: Obama v. Boehner: a Netanyahu story









