The Cable

White House Undermines Top Israeli Official at Home

The Obama administration's decision to snub Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon by denying him meetings with top American officials may have had one more purpose beside wanting to punish him for his harsh criticism of Secretary of State John Kerry: to weaken him politically at home.

By meeting with not only their counterparts but also other top U.S. officials, visiting Israeli ministers signal to their political supporters back home that they enjoy close ties with U.S. administrations. On his latest visit to Washington, Yaalon was denied that opportunity last week, with the White House denying his requests to see Kerry, Vice President Joe Biden, and National Security Advisor Susan Rice. Adding insult to injury, the snubs were leaked to the Israeli news website Ynet and then to the Associated Press.

The latest high-profile American slap in the face already has had repercussions in Israel, with Finance Minister Yair Lapid warning of trouble in the U.S.-Israel relationship.

"There is a crisis with the U.S. and we should treat it as a crisis," Lapid said, according to a report in the Jerusalem Post. "Relations with the U.S. are necessary and important to the state of Israel and we must do everything in the world to get out of the crisis," he said Saturday at a cultural event in Tel Aviv.

Yaalon, a former chief of staff of Israel's defense forces who became defense minister in 2013, has not ruled out running for prime minister. Asked about his ambitions, "I don't know," Yaalon said in an interview published Sunday in the Washington Post. "If the people of Israel want me, I will have to consider it."

The defense minister's hopes for higher office could suffer if the Israeli public sees him as incapable of repairing -- or fears he will further exacerbate -- the rocky ties between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Barack Obama. The two leaders have clashed on a variety of issues, most notably over Iran's nuclear program and the White House's push for intensive peace talks with the Palestinians.

The rebuff is only the latest between leaders of the two countries. In March 2010, Obama presented Netanyahu with a list of demands, including key ones to halt new Israeli settlements in east Jerusalem, and left the Israeli leader waiting in the Roosevelt Room of the White House while the president went to dinner with his family.

Yaalon, who managed to see Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power, has long had his own problems with the administration.

In January, Yaalon said in the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth that Kerry was  "obsessive and messianic" in regard to his attempts to promote the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians. Yaalon went on to say that "the only thing that can 'save us' is for John Kerry to win a Nobel Prize and leave us in peace."

Given Yaalon's strident remarks, it's no surprise the White House isn't rolling out the red carpet for him now, said a pro-Israel congressional aide, speaking on condition of anonymity. 

"There is a limit to how much you can shit all over the White House and expect to get every meeting you want," the aide said. "I don't know why the Israelis continue to feel the need to express their disagreements in offensive terms with this administration."

Israel has been the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid since World War II, receiving about $121 billion in current dollars, almost all of it in the form of military assistance. In 2014, in addition to the annual $3.1 billion in assistance, Congress provided $504 million for various missile-defense programs.

Although Yaalon has expressed regret for his Kerry comments, there appears to be a feeling in Washington that it was insufficient, a person familiar with the Israeli position said.

Asked about the Yaalon snub, White House spokesman Josh Earnest last week said, "I can't speak to any meetings that didn't occur." 

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki pointed out last week that Yaalon's meeting with Hagel was "a natural, standard procedure," while declining to speak about any other meetings or meeting requests. 

National Security Council spokeswoman Bernadette Meehan said she had nothing to add.

John Hudson contributed to this report.

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The Cable

Will the Pentagon Split With the White House on Ebola Response?

As the federal government maintains that quarantines for medical workers possibly exposed to Ebola in West Africa are unnecessary, the Army is monitoring troops working in the region as part of the Pentagon's response to the crisis "in a separate location" at their home base in Italy.

Army spokesman Col. Steve Warren did not call the move a quarantine in a statement issued on Monday. Rather, he said that "about a dozen" troops were being monitored.

"Out of an abundance of caution, the Army did direct a small number of military personnel (about a dozen) that recently returned to Italy to be monitored in a separate location at their home station (Vicenza)," Warren stated. "There has been no decision to implement this force wide and any such decision would be made by the secretary of Defense. None of these individuals have shown any symptoms of exposure."

According to reports, the soldiers are being monitored away from their families for 21 days. The Army refuses to call the isolation a quarantine, although separating people for medical reasons meets the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's definition of quarantine.

The Army's move comes as Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel weighs a department-wide quarantine for any service member exposed to the virus. A senior military official told Foreign Policy that the Joint Chiefs of Staff recommend quarantining all troops but the final decision rests solely with Hagel.

If Hagel does implement a quarantine for troops possible exposed to Ebola, it would put him at odds with the White House. After several states announced that they would quarantine medical workers who were possibly exposed to Ebola late last week, the Obama administration spent the weekend insisting isolation wasn't necessary.

"I don't want to be directly criticizing the decision that was made but we have to be careful that there aren't unintended consequences," Anthony S. Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said Sunday. ""The best way to stop this epidemic is to help the people in West Africa."

However, even after the release of Kaci Hickox, the nurse who was quarantined in New Jersey despite testing negative for Ebola -- twice -- GOP Gov. Chris Christie defended his decision to isolate patients.

"I didn't reverse my decision," Christie said while campaigning in Florida for Republican Gov. Rick Scott, who also announced enhanced monitoring of Ebola-exposed health-care workers. "She hadn't had any symptoms for 24 hours. And she tested negative for Ebola. So there was no reason to keep her. The reason she was put into the hospital in the first place was because she was running a high fever and was symptomatic."

Even as Christie and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo eased quarantine restrictions, the handling of the Ebola epidemic continued to be a political issue ahead of Nov. 4 midterm elections that could swing the Senate to Republican control. On Sunday, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said that President Barack Obama's response to the disease on U.S. soil shows poor management.

"I think ultimately what this election has a lot do with is really bad management, mismanagement, the lack of management, managers that can't manage and the president's at the head of all of this. I mean, the question really is the president's policies," Priebus said on CNN's "State of the Union." .

On Monday, CDC chief Tom Frieden said that the federal government would increase its monitoring of medical workers exposed to the disease in Africa. He said that high-risk cases should be isolated, while moderate-risk cases would be monitored. However, Frieden did not call for a federal quarantine.

Monday afternoon, Virginia and Maryland became the next states to monitor medical workers possible exposed to the disease. However, those people will not be quarantined.

When asked about the quarantine policies in New York, New Jersey and Illinois, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said that the administration was working closely with mayors and governors in each state.

"What we hope," said Earnest, is that their decisions will be "driven by science."

Peter Macdiarmid