Spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan cited a "long-standing practice" of not meeting heads of state close to elections, which Israel will hold in mid-March.
Mr
Netanyahu was invited by House Speaker John Boehner in what is seen as a rebuke
to Mr Obama's Iran policy.
The
US president has said he will veto attempts to add new sanctions on Iran.
Mr
Obama believes new measures will be harmful to negotiations over Iran's nuclear
programme, talks Mr Netanyahu has opposed. The
Israeli prime minister has warned a deal between Iran and the US will pose a
threat to Israel.
On
Thursday, Mr Netanyahu formally accepted the invitation from senior Republican
Mr Boehner, saying it will give him the chance to "thank President Barack
Obama, Congress and the American people for their support of Israel"
He
is expected to discuss Iran, as well as Islamic militant groups, in his address
to Congress on 3 March.
"As
a matter of long-standing practice and principle, we do not see heads of state
or candidates in close proximity to their elections, so as to avoid the
appearance of influencing a democratic election in a foreign country," Ms
Meehan said in a statement.
She
added Mr Obama had "been clear about his opposition" about new
sanctions legislation.
"The
president has had many conversations with the prime minister on this matter,
and I am sure they will continue to be in contact."
Nancy
Pelosi, the House's top Democrat, said the visit, two weeks before Israel's
election and in the midst of "delicate" Iran talks, is not
"appropriate and helpful".
Mr
Netanyahu is fighting a tough election against the Labor Party's Yitzhak
Herzog, who has focused on the prime minister's cooler relations with Mr Obama.
Analysis:
Nick Bryant, BBC News, Washington:
"A
full blown crisis" was how Jeffrey Goldberg, one of America's leading
Middle East commentators, described relations between the US and Israel last
October, in an article that famously quoted a senior Obama
administration official describing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a most
unflattering, ornithological manner.
Since
then, relations have deteriorated still further. The news this week that
Netanyahu had accepted an invitation from the Republican House Speaker John
Boehner to address a joint session of Congress - essentially to deliver a
rebuttal to the president's pledge to veto any new congressional sanctions
against Iran - blindsided the White House.
They
complained that it was a "breach of protocol." In announcing that the
prime minister will not get to meet the president, the Obama administration is
invoking diplomatic protocol again.
But this will be
widely interpreted as a snub, and make a difficult relationship even more
acrimonious. 22 January 2015 BBC.
No comments:
Post a Comment