US Solicitor General: Israel Has No Claim to Jerusalem,

BY: Adam Kredo, Free Beacon
November 4, 2014 3:10 pm

Lawyers for the Obama administration compared Israel’s control of Jerusalem to Russian claims over the Ukrainian territory of Crimea during oral arguments this week before the Supreme Court in a case concerning the rights of U.S. citizens to list Jerusalem as part of Israel on their passports.

U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, who is rumored to be in the running to replace outgoing Attorney General Eric Holder, drew the comparison on Monday while he attempted to convince the Supreme Court that Jerusalem is not officially part of Israel.

The controversial case hinges around Menachem Zivotofsky, who was born in Jerusalem in 2002. Zivotofsky’s parents requested that Menachem’s U.S. passport bear “Jerusalem, Israel” as his place of birth, a request that was denied by the Obama administration on the basis of its longstanding policy to not recognize the holy city as part of Israel.

The Zivotofsky family sued following the decision and the case has been stuck in judicial limbo since. The Supreme Court agreed to hear the case and initial arguments by both sides were presented this week.

Obama administration lawyers argue that the case infringes on the president’s executive right to conduct foreign policy. By acknowledging Jerusalem as Israeli territory, the White House would lose its credibility in the peace process, as well as its jurisdiction to manage foreign affairs, the government maintains.

Lawyers for the Zivotofsky family disagree.

They argue that a portion of a 2002 law permitting U.S. citizens born in Jerusalem to have “Israel” listed as their birthplace supersedes the Obama administration’s policy position on Jerusalem. While the law was signed by former President George W. Bush, he and President Barack Obama have both issued signing statements to avoid implementing the measure.

During Monday’s arguments before the court, Solicitor General Verrilli maintained that a formal acknowledgment of Jerusalem being part of Israel would be tantamount to the United States putting “Crimea, Russia” on a citizen’s passport.

Verrilli was referring to the Ukrainian region of Crimea, which Russia forcefully seized earlier this year.

“The position of the executive [Obama] is that we recognize, as a practical matter, the authority of Israel over West Jerusalem,” Verrilli argued, according to court transcripts. “With respect to the rest of Jerusalem, the issue is far more complicated.”

“I do think, for example, Your Honor,” Verrilli said to Justice Samuel Alito, “if [we] were to start issuing passports to people born in Crimea tomorrow that identified Russia as the country of birth, that would carry obvious implications for our foreign policy position, and it would contradict the foreign policy position in a way that could be quite deleterious.”

As with the disputes over Crimea’s status, stating that Jerusalem is part of Israel also would interfere with the White House’s policy positions, Verrilli argued.

As arguments proceeded in the case, the justices appeared to split along the justices’ traditional conservative and liberal lines.

At multiple points, Justice Sonia Sotamayor appeared to argue that it would be a “lie” for the U.S. government to acknowledge on a passport that Jerusalem is in Israel.

Putting “Jerusalem, Israel” on a U.S. passport is a lie since the executive branch does not believe it to be true as a matter of policy, Sotamayor said.

“What they’re asking you [the Zivotofskys] to do is to look—they’re asking the government to lie,” Sotamayor said.

She repeated this argument again later in the arguments.

“How could you tell me it’s not a lie?” Sotamayor asked Alyza Lewin, the lawyer representing the Zivotofsky family. “You, the United States, are being asked to put on the passport that you believe the place of birth of this individual is Israel, and the government—and the executive has said, no, we don’t think it was Israel, we think it was Jerusalem.

Lewin maintains that the addition of “Israel” to the passport in question does not constitute official U.S. government “recognition” of Jerusalem as belonging to Israel, and, therefore, does not breach foreign policy pronouncements.

The Obama administration has countered that such a declaration would harm President Obama’s “credibility” in global affairs.

“Foreign governments, foreign peoples will not be able to have complete confidence that the position that the president announces on behalf of the United States is, in fact, the position of the United States,” Verrilli argued.

Justice Anthony Kennedy wondered why the administration would not just submit to the request with an added clarifier stating that it does not reflect official U.S. policy.

Justice Alito also was skeptical that there could be any reasonable “misunderstanding” of the executive branch’s position.

“So why will there be any effect on foreign policy except by people who will misunderstand the situation, either because they really don’t understand it or they will exploit it in some way?” he asked.

Court observers have paid particular attention to the case since it focuses on one of the world’s most intractable and hot button problems.

“This case manages to combine two of the things that this administration dislikes the most: Congress and Israel,” Adam J. White, a D.C.-based lawyer and writer, told the Washington Free Beacon.

“The administration’s fundamental position is that if the State Department is required to comply with the statute, then there may be confusion about what President Obama’s position is on the state of Israel,” White explained.

However, “that argument could be politely classified as a ‘legal fiction,’ because no one really questions what President Obama’s policy is toward Israel,” he said. “His administration has made that painfully obvious, and no matter what the Supreme Court decides in this case, President Obama’s position will continue to be obvious throughout the Middle East.”

November 5, 2014 | 54 Comments »

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4 Comments / 54 Comments

  1. @ bernard ross:

    “It is the very EVENTS themselves which are bringing the matter of legality into public focus.”

    “true, but not in the best way……if scotus rules against the petitioner it will be construed as a vote against the legality of settlement”

    SCOTUS ruled against Dred Scott. It wasn’t the end of the road for freedom.

    — Actually it cleared the decks for the War to complete the American Revolution begun “four score and seven yrs” earlier.

    “Sometimes, just letting events unfold constitutes doing something.”

    “true, not doing…… but I do not believe this is such a time”

    I wouldn’t presume to say. For myself, I’ll know if there’s something specific to be done when it’s time to do it. But I’ve seen far, FAR too many instances of precipitous action originating in bad timing simply because it was prompted more by ANXIETY than rationality.

    @ bernard ross:

    “The choice is between bad (and getting worse) with a reasonable hope of recovery

    — and bad (and getting worse) with a much diminished chance of recovery.”

    “I believe it is bad, getting worse with a diminishing chance of recovery as time progresses…”

    Doesn’t strike me that way at all. That scenario, in fact, actually seems more likely to me ONLY if we are tempted by emotional pressure to stab blindly at shadows, thus showing our hand prematurely and, so doing, foreclose on future options (perhaps what MIGHT have been better ones) in that department.

    But then, I trust the big timepiece in the sky; always have. I wouldn’t try to ‘advance’ (or ‘retard’) the hands on that clock; the very IDEA is absurd-verging-on-the-megalomaniacal. Better to adjust oneself to ITS timing.

    Yet I can’t presume to be able to ‘give’ somebody else the faith — OR the emotional discipline — to keep from going off half-cocked.

    “…similar to cancer, a terminal disease”

    Not similar to anything ‘terminal.’

    The Jewish people is eternal.

    — That’s promised . . . by one who always keeps His word.

  2. dweller Said:

    — and bad (and getting worse) with a much diminished chance of recovery

    I believe it is bad, getting worse with a diminishing chance of recovery as time progresses, similar to cancer, a terminal disease

  3. dweller Said:

    It is the very EVENTS themselves which are bringing the matter of legality into public focus.

    true, but not in the best way……if scotus rules against the petitioner it will be construed as a vote against the legality of settlement whereas it may be to preserve presidential authority: an unnecessary and negative confusion.

    dweller Said:

    Sometimes, just letting events unfold constitutes doing something.

    true, not doing…… but I do not believe this is such a time

  4. @ bernard ross:

    “[A]nything less than a solid legal case in a suitable jurisdiction for such a first foray into this kind of litigation could well have a counterproductive effect in the public eye (including the Jewish public eye) — and not only for that action itself but also for any possible subsequent such attempts (deleterious even to the prospect of better conceived, subsequent attempts) as well. We don’t want to blow it. There WILL be a time for it though; of that I’m certain.”

    “I think we are already blowing it…”

    The choice here is not between “good” and “bad.”

    The choice is between bad (and getting worse) with a reasonable hope of recovery

    — and bad (and getting worse) with a much diminished chance of recovery.

    “… by doing nothing.”

    There’s no such thing as ‘doing nothing.’

    Sometimes, just letting events unfold constitutes doing something.

    To the ego (which, by its ambitious nature, likes to roll up its sleeves and plunge ahead blindly), that ‘letting’ may not feel like ‘doing something.’

    But sometimes, merely attentively observing that unfolding CAN constitute doing something.

    Watch a cat sitting in quiet repose — a calm and patient alertness suffuses his presence. He’s not ‘doing nothing’; he’s preparing himself. Should a mouse or gopher, two minutes from now or 20 minutes from now, cross his field of vision 10 yds away, he’s got it.

    Who would’ve imagined, in 2002, when the Zivotovskys first made their request for their son’s passport to read “Jerusalem, Israel,” that a sitting US president would actually try to pressure SCOTUS to lie about Jerusalem’s legal status while having one of his own appointed Justices make the claim that the petitioners were trying to make the GOVT ‘lie’!

    Curiouser & curiouser. . . .

    It is the very EVENTS themselves which are bringing the matter of legality into public focus.