Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson seeks to buff image in Israel

ben carsonThe Guardian

In his first visit to Israel, the prospective Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson said he was in awe of the Jewish state, inspired by its ancient holy sites, impressed by the resilience of people living in a perpetual conflict zone – and deeply disappointed in President Barack Obama.

“I do not believe that Obama has been one to cultivate the relationship,” said Carson, a retired neurosurgeon who has emerged as a favourite of some conservatives in the early field of possible GOP candidates.  

“I would make it very clear that Israel and the United States have a long, cordial relationship, and I don’t think we should ever leave the Israelis in a position of wondering whether we support them,” Carson said in an hour-long interview in Jerusalem. “And that certainly is a question now.”

Carson, 63, perhaps best known for his groundbreaking work in separating conjoined twins, is largely unknown to most Americans. But he has earned hero status among conservative activists thanks to his outspoken criticism of Obama’s healthcare law.

His rags-to-riches story – he had a hardscrabble childhood in inner-city Detroit – and his deep Christian faith also appeal to potential voters. While Carson has said he is “strongly considering” a bid, supporters have already opened offices in the early voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

He is one of more than a dozen Republicans eyeing the presidency, and those with little international experience, such as Carson, are working to strengthen their résumés before formally announcing their 2016 plans.

Carson expressed views that are common among Israel’s nationalist right wing. He showed sympathy for Israel’s much-maligned settlement movement and questioned the desire among Palestinians for peace. He even suggested that instead of Israel relinquishing captured land to make way for a Palestinian state, neighbouring countries such as Egypt should provide the space for a future Palestine.

“That’s one possibility,” he said.

Carson is visiting Israel as a guest of The Face of Israel, a private group that sponsors trips for “influential decision makers” to promote a positive image of the country and counter “threats to Israel’s international legitimacy”. The trip has included visits to Israel’s northern front with Syria and the southern border with Gaza, and meetings with military officials and everyday people.

Although the US remains Israel’s closest and most important ally, Obama and the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, have little personal chemistry and have frequently clashed. The US has been outspoken in its criticism of Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem – captured areas claimed by the Palestinians as parts of a future state. At the same time, the US secretary of state, John Kerry, has made numerous trips to the region and elsewhere to try to broker a peace deal.

Carson said the criticism of the settlements has been exaggerated, and he asserted that Palestinian hostility toward Israel is what is preventing peace in the region. Of Netanyahu, Carson said: “I think he’s a great leader in a difficult time.”

While he expressed sympathy for the plight of Palestinians, Carson said Israeli security concerns were more important in the short term, noting that after Israel’s withdrawal of troops and settlers from the Gaza Strip in 2005, the territory was overrun by Hamas militants. An Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank, he said, would be even riskier, given its proximity to major Israeli cities.

“Until such time as their neighbours are no longer desirous of their elimination,” he said, Israel’s continued control of the West Bank “makes perfectly good sense”.

There is little disagreement among the GOP’s top prospects on American policy toward Israel, given religious conservatives’ overwhelming support for the Jewish state and the influence of conservative donors like billionaire casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, an outspoken Israel supporter who donated more to Republicans in the last presidential contest than anyone else.

Carson said he expects to make a decision on seeking the presidency by May. If he wins the job, he promised a different approach toward Israel.

“I would make sure that Israel knew that we had their back,” he said. “Because if their neighbours know that we’re backing them up, they’re not going to be anywhere near as aggressive.”

http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2014/dec/20/republican-presidential-hopeful-ben-carson-israel

4 thoughts on “Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson seeks to buff image in Israel

  1. Anyone else sick of watching presidential hopefuls dashing off to Israel to slavishly profess their undying commitment to a racist, violent criminal state? In Carson’s case its twice as disgusting given the treatment of African jews seeking asylum, with some Israeli politicians and rabbis demanding the ethnic cleansing of all non-white, non-jewish residents.

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