Angela Merkel Anti-Israel bigotry and bias Benjamin Weinthal

Benjamin Weinthal article on Merkel’s pressure on Roman president to not move embassy to J’lem reverberates in Western media


 

Benjamin on Twitter:

I am delighted that major news outlets/websites in Australia, Romania, the US, Germany, and Austria picked up my exclusive re: German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged Romania’s president to not move his country’s embassy to Jerusalem. German gov’t sought to hide the anti-Israel act.

EXCLUSIVE: MERKEL URGED ROMANIAN PRESIDENT TO NOT MOVE EMBASSY TO JERUSALEM

Germany refuses to say if Jerusalem is Israel’s capital.

BY BENJAMIN WEINTHAL
 NOVEMBER 15, 2018 21:27

NEW YORK – In an effort to stop Romania’s government from relocating its embassy to Jerusalem, German chancellor Angela Merkel called Romania’s President Klaus Iohannis in April, urging him to stop Bucharest’s declared announcement to move its diplomatic building to Israel’s capital.

A Western source told The Jerusalem Post that Merkel lobbied the Romanian president to put a halt on the relocation of its embassy to Jerusalem. It is believed that Merkel called other European politicians as part of a campaign to block the relocation of European embassies to Jerusalem.

The president of Romania’s Chamber of Deputies and a member of Romania’s governing party, the social democratic politician Liviu Dragnea, told the television station Antena 3 in April that the “government adopted a memorandum deciding to start the procedure to effectively move the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.”

The dramatic and apparent anti-Israel intervention by Merkel, who proclaimed in a Knesset speech in 2008 that Israel’s security interests are “non-negotiable” and part of Germany’s raison d’être, was not denied by the governments of Romania and the Federal Republic.

A spokesperson for the Romanian ministry of foreign affairs wrote the Post on Friday by email that “Regarding your question, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs cannot comment on alleged discussions between Angela Merkel and the Romanian President. We would advise you to contact the Presidential Administration should you need to have further information.” Iohannis’s office did not immediately respond to a Post query.

A spokeswoman for the Merkel administration wrote the Post on Thursday “We cannot report from confidential talks.” When asked if Jerusalem is the capital of Israel, the Merkel administration spokeswoman declined to answer directly. She said that the “status of Jerusalem should, in the framework of an agreement, be clarified.” The spokeswoman said a solution to the conflict between the Palestinians and Israelis can take place with an agreed upon two-state solution, adding “Until a such an agreement is reached, all sides should avoid steps that sharpen the existing tensions and complicate a peaceful solution of the conflict.”

 

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