Brussels: British Prime Minister Theresa May has condemned a blunt speech this week by US Secretary of State John Kerry on the state of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, an unusual move likely to boost Britain’s relations with the incoming Trump administration at the expense of President Barack Obama.
The rare diplomatic spat between Britain and the United States, which was met with surprise by the US State Department, highlighted the fast-collapsing influence of the White House in Middle East peace negotiations. It also pointed to a vast reordering of international affairs expected after President-elect Donald Trump takes office in three weeks, as US allies position themselves to curry favour with the incoming administration.
The transatlantic split was particularly unexpected given that May’s government acted as a key broker between US and Palestinian interests ahead of a UN Security Council vote last week to declare Israeli settlement construction “illegal”. British diplomats worked as go-betweens in shaping the measure to ensure that the language was acceptable to the United States, Britain’s Guardian and Israel’s Haaretz newspapers reported this week.
Kerry on Wednesday offered a harsh assessment of the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying that “his current coalition is the most right wing in Israeli history, with an agenda driven by its most extreme elements.” He criticised persistent Israel settlement expansion on the West Bank as a threat to the “two-state solution” under which Israel and a new Palestinian state would coexist side by side.
Read the full article by Michael Birnbaum at The Sydney Morning Herald.