State Department moves Jerusalem out of Israel

Mohamed couldn’t move a mountain, but the State Department has no such difficulty with Jerusalem.

Here is a news release issued by the U.S. Department of State:

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May 18, 2011

MEDIA NOTE

Deputy Secretary Steinberg’s Visit to Israel, Jerusalem and the West Bank

Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg visits Israel, Jerusalem and the West Bank May 18-19, 2011.  In Israel, Deputy Secretary Steinberg met with Israeli academic and student leaders.  In the West Bank, he met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and other Palestinian officials.  Among other issues, he discussed moving forward on Middle East peace as well as the recent fundamental changes in the region and the United States’ response to them.

Some in Israel are  upset that the State Department is

standing behind the wording of an official statement that implied that Jerusalem – including its western parts – is not a part of Israel. Against the backdrop of President Barack Obama’s speech calling on Israel to return to the 1949 Armistice lines, the statement’s implications appear more alarming.

The State Department has declined to “retract or try to claim the statement had been misunderstood.”

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Eliot Abrams, “a former foreign policy advisor for presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush,” was unhappy.

“In what country is the Knesset?… [I]t seems that this question has stumped the State Department. It does not know or will not say what country the Knesset is in, nor—one must assume—does it know what country the Prime Minister’s Office, the Israel Museum, or especially the Western Wall are in.

The wording of the statement seems to imply that Jerusalem is outside Israel. Since Steinberg’s visit included a meeting with Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon in the Foreign Ministry, which is in western Jerusalem,  the implication seems to be that western Jerusalem, too, is separate from Israel.

“I suppose the poor benighted Israelis believed they were hosting Steinberg in their country when he visited government offices,” Abrams wrote sarcastically. “But he knew better.  What makes this especially egregious is that Israeli government offices—where Mr. Steinberg would have had his official meetings—are actually in west Jerusalem, the portion Israel controlled even before 1967. Yet the Clinton State Department is apparently unwilling to call even that portion of the city ‘Israel.’”

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Abrams believes the statement is not an innocuous mistake: “While Deputy Secretary Steinberg and Secretary Clinton’s State Department may believe that the Western Wall of the ancient Temple is actually not in Israel, and are apparently unwilling to confirm that the Knesset and Prime Minister’s Office are in Israel, it’s an unsustainable position. It is a ludicrous, insulting, morally untenable position.”

In response to a query by Arutz Sheva, the State Department did not retract or try to claim the statement had been misunderstood.

Perhaps when President Obama learns the meaning of “contiguous,” the State Department will learn some geography. Or not. It ain’t easy being green.

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