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Coalition of pro-Israel organizations asks Trump to let Israel decide on sovereignty

This was in response to nine Jewish groups calling on the president on Friday to stop Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from carrying out his campaign promise to annex parts of the West Bank.

Trump
Donald Trump in September 2016, two months before being elected president of the United States. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

A coalition of 20 pro-Israel organizations sent a joint letter on Tuesday to U.S. President Donald Trump, asking him to let Israel decide on sovereignty.

This was in response to nine Jewish groups calling on the president on Friday to stop Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was re-elected to a record fifth term last week, from carrying out his campaign promise to annex parts of the West Bank.

Additionally, the Trump administration held a meeting at the White House on Tuesday, consisting of Jewish and pro-Israel leaders.

In reiterating Netanyahu’s pledge, Tuesday’s letter to Trump stated, “Throughout your presidency, you have done everything possible to keep your own campaign promises — with the move of the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, pledged by every President since Bill Clinton, being a prime example.”

“It is unfair and unreasonable to hold these Jewish communities hostage to the continuing intransigence of the Palestinian Authority,” added the letter. “And it is outrageous to suggest setting policy to kowtow to the anti-Semitic, terrorist-financed effort to boycott the world’s only Jewish state.”

Signatories on the new letter included the Coalition for Jewish Values, Endowment for Middle East Truth, the Rabbinical Alliance of America, the Republican Jewish Coalition, the Zionist Organization of America and Turning Point USA.

“What was most painful about the previous letter is that it comes from Jewish organizations yet ignores the 3300-year attachment of the Jews to their homeland,” said Rabbi Menken, managing director of the Coalition for Jewish Values, which was one of the groups invited to Tuesday’s meeting at the White House.

“It also ignores the expressed wishes of the Israelis and claims to know what will ‘lead to greater conflict’ better than Bibi Netanyahu,” he continued. “Those who support Israel’s self-determination, especially with regards to its security needs, cannot afford to sit silent.”

“These movements don’t stop with a boycott. We know where this is going, and that’s why we are going to get out ahead of it,” an attorney at the center told JNS.
On May 9, vandals spray-painted antisemitic symbols and Bible references on the Waukesha County memorial, which includes a steel beam from the World Trade Center.
“I’m not sure we should make the deal if they don’t sign,” the U.S. president said at a cabinet meeting on Wednesday. “I think they owe that to us.”
The protest was “a powerful show of solidarity,” Jayne Zirkle of the Lawfare Project told JNS. “To condemn people for attending such an event is to condemn the very principles of freedom our nation was founded on.”
“If publicly-funded institutions cannot host such events without folding to pressure, serious questions arise about that funding,” a Jewish House of Lords member said.
The attacks followed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s announcement on Tuesday that the IDF is deepening its operations in Lebanon.