The News
Sunday 22 of December 2024

Israel 'Sorry for any Hurt' with Mexico Over Wall Tweet


Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seen on a monitor before the evening news bulletin at Channel 10 in Jerusalem,photo: Reuters/Ronen Zvulun
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seen on a monitor before the evening news bulletin at Channel 10 in Jerusalem,photo: Reuters/Ronen Zvulun
Netanyahu had earlier sidestepped Mexico's demand for an apology and echoed previous Israeli explanations of his remarks on Twitter

JERUSALEM – Israel’s president told his Mexican counterpart on Tuesday that he was “sorry for the hurt” over a tweet in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to praise U.S. President Donald Trump’s plans to build a wall on the Mexican border.

In a tweet on Saturday that drew a rebuke from Mexico, the right-wing Netanyahu wrote:


Netanyahu had earlier sidestepped Mexico’s demand for an apology and echoed previous Israeli explanations — rejected as insufficient by Mexico’s Foreign Relations Secretary on Monday — of his remarks on Twitter. He said his comments did not refer to ties between the United States and its southern neighbor.

The office of President Reuven Rivlin, whose post is largely ceremonial, issued a statement taking a more conciliatory line.

“I am sorry for any hurt caused as a result of this misunderstanding, but we must remember that we are talking about a misunderstanding, and I am sure that we can put the issue behind us,” Rivlin was quoted as telling Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto.

Mexico’s Foreign Relations Secretariat (SHCP) acknowledged Rivlin’s apology.

The SHCP said Peña Nieto told Rivlin the tweet had upset Mexico and its Jewish community, before adding that Mexico wanted to maintain its friendship and cooperation with Israel.

On Monday, Mexican Foreign Relations Secretary Luis Videgaray said he thought an apology would be “appropriate” for Netanyahu’s tweet while noting that Israel was a close friend of Mexico.


Trump’s planned border wall, which he says will keep out illegal immigrants, along with his threat to impose punitive taxes against Mexico to rebalance trade, has brought about the worst crisis in U.S.-Mexican relations for decades. Trump signed an executive order last week ordering construction of the wall.

Netanyahu, in public remarks on Monday, said that in his tweet he had been referring to Trump’s praise for the barrier Israel constructed along the Egyptian frontier, a fence with electronic sensors that has largely halted the influx of African migrants.

“I did point out the remarkable success of Israel’s security fence. But I did not comment about U.S.-Mexico relations. We’ve had, and will continue to have, good relations with Mexico,” Netanyahu said in English at a cybersecurity conference in Tel Aviv on Tuesday.

Political commentators and opposition politicians in Israel said Netanyahu’s tweet had needlessly thrust Israel into the U.S.-Mexican feud.

At the Tel Aviv conference, Netanyahu said that Israeli-Mexican ties “are much stronger than any passing disagreement or misunderstanding.”

JEFFREY HELLER