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Congressman Anthony Weiner Visits Campus, Shares Views on Middle East with Students

Feb 16, 2009
-- Anthony Weiner, the fourth-term Congressman representing New York’s 9th District and a hopeful for the 2009 New York City mayoral race, visited campus recently to talk to students about Israel and its strategic position in a most unstable region. “We wanted to invite strong Jewish Democratic leaders like Anthony Weiner to show that is it possible to be both a strong supporter of Israel and a card-carrying member of the Democratic Party,” David Huggins, vice president of the YU Young Democrats, said. Weiner staunchly defended supporting and bolstering democracies in the Middle East. “I have always been taught that democracies are good; and one of the points to prove this is that there has never been a war between two democracies--the thinking being that when people have the opportunity to influence their government they don’t choose war, they generally choose to peacefully coexist,” the Congressman said. Weiner addressed students’ questions regarding the Arab-Israeli conflict as well. “The Israeli government, with our help, has made Mahmoud Abbas the de facto negotiating partner for peace,” Weiner said. “The problem is he has no power. He has no real influence in Gaza, as Fatah has been ousted in Gaza, and he arguably has no power in the West Bank. Now if the President wanted to forge a peace plan, who do they do it with? That my friends, has been the fundamental problem in the last ten years of the Arab-Israeli conflict.” The Congressman provided students with his expert commentary on the current strategic situation in the Middle East, discussing the roles of Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria in shaping the stability of the region. “We are arming the Egyptians every single year because of our desire to uphold the Camp David accords, except we are arming them against no known enemy,” he said. Weiner also spoke to students’ concerns about the efficacy and utility of providing foreign aid. “Foreign aid is pretty inexpensive when compared to alternatives, which are having boots on the ground. I have long been of the belief that any aid to the territories is wasted because it is not buying us any goodwill. There is not a lot we can do; ultimately parties have to agree that they want to make peace.”