Macron chides ministers for leaking comment on Israel creation

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The French president berates officials for leaking his remark that as a creation of the UN, Israel should respect the body’s decisions

French President Emmanuel Macron has slammed his own ministers for leaking a comment concerning Israel that he made during a closed-door Cabinet meeting on Tuesday. The remark drew a sharp rebuke from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Earlier this week, AFP news agency, citing an unnamed meeting attendee, reported President Macron as saying on Tuesday that “Netanyahu must not forget that his country was created by a UN decision.” He was referring to a resolution adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1947 on a plan to partition Palestine into Jewish and Arab states. According to the media outlet, the French head of state added that “this is not the time to break away from UN decisions.”

Israel is currently at odds with the UN over international calls to cease hostilities in Lebanon, where the IDF is engaged in a ground operation against Hezbollah militants.

Speaking at a press conference following an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday, President Macron stressed that French ministers “must respect the rules and be ethical, and not share comments that are either truncated, false or taken out of context.” He said he was “stupefied” to see the media reports of his closed-door remarks.

“I speak enough about the situation in the Middle East and I don’t need ventriloquists,” the French president said.

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In a statement quoted by the Times of Israel, Prime Minister Netanyahu reminded President Macron that “it was not the UN resolution that established the State of Israel, but rather the victory achieved in the War of Independence with the blood of heroic fighters, many of whom were Holocaust survivors – including from the Vichy regime in France.”

The two leaders have traded barbs since last week, with the French president last Friday accusing the Israeli military of “deliberately” targeting UN peacekeepers in southern Lebanon. Macron has advocated halting the sale of Western weapons to Israel, arguing that this would help stop the bloodshed in Gaza and Lebanon.

Netanyahu fired back, denouncing Macron’s suggestion as shameful at a time when “Israel fights the forces of barbarism led by Iran.”

Israel “would win with or without [Western] support,” the Israeli prime minister insisted at the time.

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