Macron calls us Ambassador Charles Kushner
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Caitlin Yilek
Policy reporter
Caitlin Yilek is a policy reporter at News, based in Washington, DC, previously worked for Washington Examiner and The Hill, and was a member of the report of Paul Miller Washington of 2022 with the National Press Foundation.
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Full interview | French president Emmanuel Macron
The French president, Emmanuel Macron, said he was offline for Charles Kushner, the United States ambassador to France and the father of President Trump, Jared Kushner, to publicly accuse him of taking measures in insufficiency to combat anti -Semitism, and to link the foreign policy positions of France with the internal incidents of violence against the Jews in France.
In a letter published in the Wall Street Journal to Macron in August, Kushner wrote that he had “deep concern about the dramatic increase in anti -Semitism in France and the lack of sufficient action by his government to face it.”
“Public statements that argue Israel and gestures towards the recognition of a Palestinian state emboldest the measures that give legitimacy to the Hamas and their aliats and their companies. ”
In an interview with the “Face the Nation” Margaret Brennan moderator on Thursday in Paris, Macron described Kushner’s critic as an “error” and an “unacceptable statement for someone who is supposed to be a diplomat.”
“This is unacceptable,” he said.
Macron said that a French ambassador would never be allowed to make similar public comments on another country because it would risk diplomacy with those nations.
“So, or you are a person who wants to express freely,” Macron said. “If you are a diplomat, you have to follow the rule of diplomacy … [American] The taxpayer’s money is not used correctly to finance this type of declaration. ”
French Ministry of Foreign Affairs invoked The ambassador last month in a formal reprimand. The Ministry of France said that Kushner’s claims “face international law”, citing the “obligation not to interfere with the internal affairs of the states” at the Vienna Diplomatic Relations Convention of 1961.
Kushner also wrote that “anti -risism is anti -Semitism, simple and simple.”
The State Department said at that time in a statement to News, which Kushner “is our representative of the United States government in France and is doing a great job by moving our national interests on that role.”
Macron acknowledged that sometimes people who criticize the state of Israel and their government may be motivated by the hatred of the Jews, but rejected the idea that any of their criticisms of Netanyahu’s government policies is inherently anti -Semitic.
He told Brennan: “I was the first president in France to adopt the definition of anti -Semitism, which makes him the equivalent of anti -risism.”
Macron firmly rejected the notion that his objections to the murder in Gaza or his call to the creation of a Palestinian State is inherently anti -Semitic or puts at risk the French Jews. He argued that “it does not mean that it is not allowed to disagree with the Israel government.” In disagreement with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “does not make me an anti -Semitic,” he said.
Netanyahu currently leads the government of the right in Israeli history, opposes the creation of a Palestinian state and has fought a war of almost two years in Gaza who managed to kill the leaders of Hamas who carried out the bloody terrorist attack of October 7 that killed 1200 of his people. The war since then has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, and their policies, including a blockade of humanitarian aid, have led the famine in Gaza.
Hamas still operates in Gaza, and Macron said that Hamas is still able to recruit more fighters even though Israel killed the best levels of the terrorist group. Macron argues that the failure to eliminate Hamas support through military force is proof that support is necessary for an alternative government in the form of Palestinian authority.
Netanyahu accused Macron of promoting anti -Semitism after the French president announced that France would recognize the Palestinian State on Monday at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
The high -level meeting of world leaders and their representatives, and other countries, including the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada, also plan to join France to recognize Palestinian status.
Most of the countries of the world, 147 UN members recognize the right of Palestinians to self -determination, but the decision of the Western powers, including the member of the UN Security Council, France and the United Kingdom, is symbolically significant. It is also a sign of the increase in the isolation of the current Israeli government, which has refused to finish the war of almost two years in Gaza.
The plan developed by France and Saudi Arabia involves several phases, including a high fire between Israel and Hamas, Hamas released the remaining hostages that took place since its attack on October 7, 2023 against Israel and the restoration of humanitarian aid to Gaza. These conditions would have to be met before France opens an embassy there, Macron said. The second phase involves the reconstruction and the Gaza government and the third phase focuses on a solution of two states.
Macron made Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas, the 90 -year -old leader who governs Cisjordan occupied, publicly denounced Hamas and agrees to reform authority and celebrate elections.
“Recognizing the Palestinian state today is the only way to provide a political solution to a situation that has to stop,” Macron said.
The position puts France in direct conflict with the Trump administration, which prevented the members of the Palestinian authority from obtaining visas to attend the diplomatic meeting. Despite President Trump’s statements that hunger is happening in Gaza and Israel should end his war there, Netanyahu has ruled out any American impulse to do so. Recently, Trump said “I was not excited” with Netanyahu’s decision to bombard the ally of the United States, while Hamas members gathered to discuss a proposal from the United States to end the Gaza War.
The current US administration also seems to oppose the creation of a Palestinian State, with Trump supporting a proposal to eliminate Gazanes and send them to other countries. The United States is still a firm defender of Israel, as well as its main arms supplier.
Margaret Brennan
Margaret Brennan is a “face the nation with Margaret Brennan” in News. Based in Washington, DC, Brennan is also the main correspondent of foreign issues and contributing correspondent for 60 minutes. In addition, it appears regularly in the “News afternoon news”, leading Washington’s coverage when the news is broken on the fronts of political and foreign affairs.


