Saturday, 21 May 2011
Abdallah II Worried about Washington’s Call for his Departure
Local Editor
King of Jordan, Abdallah II, has complained against the policy adopted by the US administration towards the ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, upon the people of Egypt had called on him to step down, the Israeli Newspaper Maa’rif reported.
According to the Israeli daily, the king expressed his concerns in a meeting with Jewish organizations during his recent visit to Washington.
Abdallah has also strongly criticized the American policy, stating that the US- backed governments are fear of it now, due to the rude abandon of Mubarak and the calling upon him to resign.
Abdallah is fear of US Administration’s call for his departure. “If Syrian president Bashar al-Assad left his post, Israel wouldn’t shed a tear”, Ma’arif added.
However, there isn’t any clear Israeli policy with respect to the Syrian affair. US works currently on toppling the Assad regime. For this reason, the king’s fears are understandable, Maa’rif concluded.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
King of Jordan, Abdallah II, has complained against the policy adopted by the US administration towards the ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, upon the people of Egypt had called on him to step down, the Israeli Newspaper Maa’rif reported.
According to the Israeli daily, the king expressed his concerns in a meeting with Jewish organizations during his recent visit to Washington.
Abdallah has also strongly criticized the American policy, stating that the US- backed governments are fear of it now, due to the rude abandon of Mubarak and the calling upon him to resign.
Abdallah is fear of US Administration’s call for his departure. “If Syrian president Bashar al-Assad left his post, Israel wouldn’t shed a tear”, Ma’arif added.
However, there isn’t any clear Israeli policy with respect to the Syrian affair. US works currently on toppling the Assad regime. For this reason, the king’s fears are understandable, Maa’rif concluded.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
Labels:
Jordan,
Mubarak,
Popular Revolutions,
Syria,
US Foreign Policy
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