Rice: U.S. opposes settlements and outsiders imposing solutions
Published June 7, 2016
WASHINGTON (JTA) — The Obama administration will continue to object to Israeli and Palestinian unilateral actions, Susan Rice said, while also resisting outside attempts to impose a solution.
Rice, the U.S. national security adviser, told the American Jewish Committee’s annual Washington conference on Monday that “we continue to strongly oppose Israeli settlement activity.”
“It moves Israel toward a one-state reality,” she said.
However, she also cited the occasions when the Obama administration opposed bids by the Palestinians and others to impose a solution through the United Nations, and said that policy would hold.
“When the Palestinians tried to short circuit the path to statehood, President Obama said peace will not come through resolutions at the United Nations,” she said.
Her remarks appeared to address concerns in Israel and among pro-Israel groups that the Obama administration is planning in its final months to join outside efforts to impose a solution on the Palestinians.
Earlier Monday, Rice told the Forward that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry attended a conference on Israeli-Palestinian peace called by the French government in order to moderate its message.
“Secretary Kerry participated because we are very much of the view that this very delicate issue has to be handled effectively and we can’t see efforts that might, in fact, complicate the situation on the ground be allowed to generate distraction — or worse, renewed or intensified frictions,” Rice said in an interview with the newspaper.
Israel’s government had strongly objected to the Paris conference. The conference’s concluding statement last week was more moderate than Israel expected, reportedly because of Kerry’s interventions.
Rice in her speech to the AJC emphasized that the Obama administration was as committed to defending Palestinians as it was Israel.
“We continue to encourage (the Israelis and the Palestinians) to take meaningful actions on the ground,” she said, and named the challenges children face in growing up in Netanya and Sderot in Israel and Jenin in the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip.
“Children that are just like yours and mine deserve a future that is not consumed by this conflict,” she said.
“When Hamas digs tunnels so they can kidnap and kill Israelis Israel is not alone, when one country is singled out time and time again on the floor of the United Nations Israel is not alone, when angry forces attack Israel’s right to exist Israel is not alone,” Rice said. “And when Palestinians are attacked by mobs shouting ‘Death to Arabs,’ when Palestinians’ mosques and churches are vandalized, the Palestinian people are not alone.”
Rice also enumerated U.S. assistance to Israel, noting that the country received more than half of all U.S. military assistance.