Obama arrives in Israel for first visit
The trip, his first to
the country as president, is part of his sweep across the Middle East,
which will include visits to the West Bank and Jordan.
Designed by Israel and funded by the United States, the battery was deployed at the height of November's fighting between Israel and Hamas. It intercepted a rocket headed for Tel Aviv, Israeli ambassador to the United States Michael Oren said.
What to expect from Obama's Israel trip
Israelis watching the war next door
Obama on Iran: 'All options on the table'
Passover in Israel: No bread for Obama
Afterward, Obama will
head to Jerusalem to meet Israeli President Shimon Peres and Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, where Iran is expected to be a hot topic.
Obama heads to Israel with few expectations, many questions
Concerns about Iran
On Tuesday, Peres
conceded his country may disagree at times with the White House over
Iran's nuclear progress. But he said he is "free of doubts" that Obama
would use military force if necessary to stop Tehran from developing a
nuclear bomb.
As he prepared for this
trip, Obama told an Israeli TV station he believed there was still a
year or so before Iran reached the final development stage -- suggesting
he believes there is more time for diplomacy than the Israeli prime
minister would like.
But Peres played down disagreements between the U.S. and Israeli intelligence assessments of Iran's progress toward a bomb.
"There may be some
differences in timing, but basically we support the policy of the
president of the United States," Peres said.
Netanyahu has voiced
concerns that Washington has a less urgent view of Iran's progress
toward developing a nuclear warhead, but has welcomed the
administration's more muscular language recently that "all options" are
on the table.
A shaky relationship
Obama's relationship
with Netanyahu has never been warm, and the Israeli prime minister
supported Republican challenger Mitt Romney in last year's presidential
election.
Despite getting off to a
rocky start with Netanyahu by pushing for a freeze of Israeli
settlements, Obama's vocal support for him through the November crisis
with Hamas and U.S. financial support for the Iron Dome anti-missile
program could pave the road for greater trust in the relationship.
The Israeli-Palestinian dispute
White House officials
say Obama is not carrying a new peace initiative and is hardly
optimistic there is solid ground to try to revive negotiations.
Most of all, the
president's aides say, he wants to assess how prepared -- if at all --
Netanyahu and Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas are to return to
negotiations.
Palestinians want Obama
to prove there are consequences if his call for an Israeli settlement
freeze is again ignored -- as it is currently ignored with construction
of subdivisions.
And their grievances are
evident in more personal ways: Posters on Ramallah streets
sarcastically advise Obama not to bring his smartphone because Israel
does not allow 3G or better service in the Palestinian territories.
Poll: Most Americans say Israel is a friend
According to a new CNN/ORC International poll,
46% of Americans surveyed said Israel is an ally of the U.S., and 33%
said the country's not an ally but friendly. Only 8% say Israel is
unfriendly, with 6% calling the country an enemy of the U.S.
But if Israel were to
attack Iran to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons, Americans
were split on how the United States should react.
Of those polled, 49% said the U.S. should support Israel, while another 49% said the country should not get involved.
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