Netanyahu to Obama: I'm Not Backing Romney - East Idaho News
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Netanyahu to Obama: I’m Not Backing Romney

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Getty 072012 BenjaminNetanyahu?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1348251580483GALI TIBBON/AFP/GettyImages(NEW YORK) — Despite close personal ties to Mitt Romney and recent comments suggesting he was unhappy with the Obama administration’s Iran policy, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly promised the Obama camp he has no plans to “interfere” with the campaign before Election Day.

According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Netanyahu sent his defense minister, Ehud Barak, to deliver a goodwill message to Chicago mayor and former White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel on Thursday afternoon.

An aide to Israeli leader said “no comment” when questioned about nature of the meeting and a spokeswoman for Emanuel would only confirm that Barak met with the Chicago mayor Thursday afternoon.

This marks the second time in six days the Israeli leader has sought, either personally or through back channels — Barak and Emanuel are friends — to distance himself from the perception he is agitating for the president’s defeat in November. Asked by Meet the Press moderator David Gregory on Sunday if he thought “Governor Mitt Romney as President Romney [would] make Israel safer,” Netanyahu demurred.

“I’m not going to be drawn into the American election. And what’s guiding my statements is not the American political calendar, but the Iranian nuclear calendar,” the Israeli leader replied. “I’m talking to [President Obama]. I just talked to him the other day. We are in close consultation. We’re trying to prevent that. It’s really not a partisan issue. It’s a policy issue, not a partisan issue.”

Netanyahu and Romney have been friends for more than 35 years, first meeting at the Boston Consulting Group, where they worked as corporate business advisers during the Israeli leader’s time living in the U.S. Netanyahu returned to Israel in the late 1970s and was soon pursuing political office. They never lost touch, discussing policy and, on occasion, swapping favors, like when Romney urged Bay State legislators to divert public pension money from businesses with ties to Iran.

So when the Israeli prime minister turned up in yet another Pro-Romney Super PAC ad, it was only natural to ask: Was Netanyahu, his relationship with Obama always in varying degrees of distress, ready to formally endorse his old pal Romney for president?

The Romney campaign says no. “Governor Romney believes we must stand with our allies,” spokeswoman Andrea Saul told ABC News, “but he is not seeking the endorsement of foreign leaders.”  

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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