首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
On Wednesday, Sept. 23, President Barack Obama used his first-ever address to the U.N. General Assembly to try and reverse the i
On Wednesday, Sept. 23, President Barack Obama used his first-ever address to the U.N. General Assembly to try and reverse the i
admin
2012-02-24
12
问题
On Wednesday, Sept. 23, President Barack Obama used his first-ever address to the U.N. General Assembly to try and reverse the impression that his ambitious Middle East peace effort had suffered a reversal at the hand of Israel’s hawkish Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. "I am not naive," Obama told the gathered world leaders. "I know this will be difficult. But all of us must decide whether we are serious about peace or whether we only lend it lip service."
Many a jaded commentator saw Obama’s Tuesday meeting with Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas as a symbol of surrender to Netanyahu’s refusal of the U.S. demand that Israel halt all construction on land conquered in 1967. Instead, Netanyahu offered a partial and time-limited freeze and appeared to force the President of the United States to back down. For Abbas, the handshake with Netanyahu orchestrated by Obama was viewed as a humiliating climb down from his refusal to talk to the Israelis until they implemented that settlement freeze.
Netanyahu, briefing the Israeli media after the talks, suggested that the Palestinians had also caved in to his demand for a reopening of talks without preconditions on an agenda the two sides would determine in discussions. But Abbas insisted that any talks would be based on the full range of final-status issues established by previous agreements—Netanyahu has publicly ruled out negotiating on two of those issues, the fate of Palestinian refugees and the status of Jerusalem, which both sides claim as their capital.
Abbas appeared to win Obama’s backing in the U.N. speech, which made clear that the President has not accepted Netanyahu’s position on the precursor issue of a settlement freeze even if he’s decided to move on to the final-status negotiations. "America does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements," the President insisted on Wednesday. That could be read as a response to the damage Obama’s credibility has suffered in the Arab world as a result of being forced by Netanyahu to retreat on the settlement issue, which had been widely viewed as a test of Israel’s peacemaking bona tides and had been a centerpiece of Obama’s Cairo outreach speech in the spring. But there was an even stronger challenge to Netanyahu in Obama’s declared plan to relaunch negotiations "that address the permanent-status issues: security for Israelis and Palestinians; borders, refugees and Jerusalem." He also spoke of the goal of those negotiations as being the establishment of" a viable, independent Palestinian state with contiguous territory that ends the occupation that began in 1967."
While many analysts focused on Tuesday’s meeting as an Obama admission of defeat on settlements, some were more optimistic. Former Israeli peace negotiator Daniel Levy believes that the Administration’s pivot on the issue smartly boxed Netanyahu into a negotiating process the Israeli leader would have preferred to avoid, by turning his own argument against him: if, as Netanyahu insists, settlements should be an issue for negotiation rather than a precondition because their fate will depend on future borders, then why not move straight to final-status negotiations over those borders? Final-status talks were something Netanyahu had hoped to dodge. Not only does his right-wing coalition government refuse to countenance negotiations over refugees or Jerusalem, but also, the Prime Minister, much of whose political career has been built on resisting the Oslo peace process, has sought to promote incremental improvements in Palestinian life, particularly the economy, over the search for a final two-state agreement. Obama isn’t buying it. According to Israeli accounts of Tuesday’s meeting, the U.S. President "scolded" Netanyahu and Abbas, declaring "We’ve had enough talks. We need to end this conflict. There is a window of opportunity, but it might shut." And according to these reports, Obama insisted that the negotiations will not be started from scratch but will instead be based on the previous agreements established through the Oslo process. In other words, Jerusalem and refugees are on the table, and Israel is expected to show up.
Obama is still talking tough, then, but having watched him climb down from his settlement-freeze demand—and the rebuff from moderate Arab states to the President’s call for them to make tangible gestures toward normalization of ties with Israel— most analysts are waiting to see what actions back his words. Reports from the talks suggest the Administration will summon the two parties to Washington next month for talks under U.S. auspices on the full gamut of final-status issues. But Netanyahu may have his own ideas and may be buoyed by his success in resisting the settlement- freeze demand. Indeed, the Israeli Prime Minister’s domestic popularity has surged as a result of his defiance of Obama. Abbas, however, who had already been reduced to an increasingly marginal figure by the failure of his negotiating efforts over the past decade to win any significant gains for the Palestinians, suffered further political damage by even showing up for the handshake.
But even the relatively hawkish Israeli commentator Shmuel Rosner warns that "Israel should restrain itself from declaring victory just yet. True, Obama had to draw down his overeager demands from Israel. But it is also true that Netanyahu, not long ago, had to reverse his opposition to a two-state solution and publicly declare that his goal is similar to the one espoused today by Obama. True, Abbas was dragged to the summit only days after insisting that he will not come to any meeting unless settlement construction is frozen first. But it is also true that Netanyahu, the head of the right-wing Likud Party, is one of the first Israeli Prime Ministers to agree to some form of settlement freeze."
What was the divergence between Netanyahu and Abbas?
选项
A、The former did not get Obama’s help while the latter did.
B、They did not reach any agreement on the construction issue.
C、They diverged in the place where they were going to hold talks..
D、The former refused to discuss the final-status issues while the latter insiste
答案
D
解析
此题是事实题。由第三段可知,两人的分歧在最终地位问题上。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/DziO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
ThePresidentduringtheAmericanCivilWarwas______.
Thewordconservationhasthriftymeaning.Toconserveistosaveandprotect,toleavewhatweourselvesenjoyinsuchgoodcon
Historically,executionhasservedasasignificantformofpunishmentfordeviancefromsocialnormsandcriminalbehavior.Cap
Practicallyspeaking,theartisticmaturingofthecinemawasthesingle-handedachievementofDavidW.Griffith(1875-1948).Be
Haveyoueverthoughtofthesimilaritiesbetweenthecinemaandthetheatre?Thecinemahaslearntagreatdealfromthetheat
______isaphilosophicandliterarymovementthatflourishedinNewEngland,asareactionagainstrationalismandCalvinism.
TheRoslinInstituteannouncedlastweekthatithadappliedtopatentthemethodbywhichitsscientistshadclonedDollythes
WhyWomenAreLessLikelyThanMentoCommitSuicideItisgenerallyheldthatwomenwouldseemtoBeathigherriskforsuic
TheSkillsofEssayWritingWritingcanhelpyoutogetyourthoughtsclear,toexploresomeofyourideasandto【1】yourself
随机试题
A.8寸B.9寸C.12寸D.16寸胸剑结合中点(歧骨)至脐中为
A、出现突发性聋B、氮质血症C、耐药菌株迅速出现,变态反应发生率提高D、肾性尿崩症E、厌食、激动、皮肤瘙痒等维生素AD系脂溶性,摄入过多可致
A.硝苯地平B.替硝唑C.米诺环素(二甲胺四环素)D.青霉素E.罗红霉素对Aa具有较强抑制作用的药物是
(2005年)一定质量的理想气体,在温度不变的条件下,当压强降低时,分子的平均碰撞次数和平均自由程的变化情况是()。
质量检验的技术依据应该是()。
一般资料:男,26岁,公司职员。案例介绍:求助者是某公司的业务员,三个星期前和客户发生口角并动手打人。虽然事后两人也成了合作伙伴。但是求助者总觉得那位客户还要找机会报复自己,见到此人就紧张害怕,为此尽量不与此人接触。现在也很少与其他人接触,而且还
张某、陈某结婚多年,因张某沉迷于网购,双方协议离婚,张某同意家庭的主要财产由陈某取得。离婚后不久,陈某发现张某曾在婚姻存续期间私自购买了三处房产并登记在自己名下,于是起诉张某,要求再次分割房产并要求张某承担损害赔偿责任。下列说法正确的是()。
Inourincreasinglycomplexworld,informationisbecomingthebasicbuildingblockofthesociety.(46)However,atatimewhen
运算器虽由许多部件组成,但核心部分是(9)。
ThefactthatmostAmericansliveinurbanareasdoesnotmeanthattheyresideinthecenteroflargecities.Infact,moreAme
最新回复
(
0
)