What good is it to denounce the violation of human rights in the four corners of the world if these principles are ridiculed as soon as Israel is involved, a state outside the norm, above the law?
The Americans don’t have the weapons for peace. They can’t make [Israel and Hamas] communicate ... But more than anything, they don’t seem to have the authority to force the two parties to come to an agreement.
If anything, Hillary Clinton is fiercer in her support for Israel and its prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, than Mr. Harper and his foreign minister, John Baird.
The true disaster for the region is that the United States does not want to change its stripes ... What used to be good for the United States and its strategic ally, the Israeli occupying entity, is no longer good today.
Concerning the strategic alliance between Washington and Tel-Aviv, there is no divergence between Republicans and Democrats, between McCain and Obama. However, the frame of this strategic alliance will be brought into question after the next elections, if Obama is elected.