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Obama needs to charm skeptical Israelis in visit

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) looks toward President Barack Obama as he speaks to reporters May 18, 2009, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. Obama's vow to take his message straight to the public during his first presidential visit to Israel next week will be a tough sell with many Israelis who consider him naive, too soft on the nationís enemies and even hostile to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (AP file photo)

JERUSALEM – Barack Obama’s vow to take his message straight to the public during his first presidential visit to Israel will be a tough sell with many Israelis who consider him naive, too soft on the nation’s enemies and cool to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Overcoming this perception will require a major charm offensive and an uncompromising U.S. pledge to stand behind Israel, especially when it comes to stopping Iran’s suspect nuclear program. Without a major initiative in his pocket for making peace between Israel and the Palestinians, the U.S. president will use his three-day visit, which begins on Wednesday, primarily as a means to convey a close alliance with Israel.

Rather than address Israeli leaders in parliament, as his predecessor George W. Bush did, Obama will deliver his main speech at a Jerusalem auditorium packed with university students.

Tickets for Obama’s speech Thursday at a 1,000-seat convention center are much in demand, and students are entering ticket raffles across the country.

“He could have spoken to politicians or tycoons, but instead he chose to speak to us,” said Lotem Cazes, a 25-year-old political science student at Ben-Gurion University in the southern city of Beersheba. “It’s very moving. Even though he knows that not everyone likes him here he is still coming and trying to help.”

In another effort to woo the Israeli public, Obama granted an exclusive interview with Channel 2 TV at the White House.

“What this trip allows me to do is once again to connect to the Israeli people and there is no substitute to that. The bonds between our two countries are so strong, not just shared values but shared families, shared businesses,” he said in the interview, which aired Thursday. “And for me to be able to directly speak to the Israeli people and talk about our unshakable commitment to Israel, but also to talk about hopefully a shared vision of a more peaceful and prosperous future during a time when we know there is a lot of tumult in the area, it is a great opportunity for me. I’m really looking forward to it.”

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