Netanyahu Takes Reporter Questions Ahead Of AIPAC Speech

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu does not grant many interviews to reporters based in Israel — except to those reporters who travel with him abroad.

Between his Oval Office meeting with President Trump and his keynote address before the pro-Israel group AIPAC, Netanyahu sat with a couple dozen reporters at a large round table Monday in the president's official guest house across the street from the White House, and answered questions.

Back home in Israel, Netanyahu and his spokespeople have given up most traditional media interviews in favor of Facebook missives and videos. But on trips abroad, the prime minister tends to brief the Israeli reporters and Israel-based international reporters who travel with him. On his trip to Washington, D.C., were reporters from NPR, The New York Times, The Washington Post and the major Israeli outlets.

The conversation was Israeli-style: freewheeling, uninhibited and pushy. There was a lively debate among journalists and spokespeople about the ground rules of what would be off the record.

Initially, the atmosphere was tense. Netanyahu declined to address on record Monday's explosive news in Israel — that his confidant and former media adviser Nir Hefetz agreed to cooperate with police as a witness for the state and offer testimony in corruption cases Netanyahu faces.




Source: latimes

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