Jeffrey Goldberg, Columnist

Obama to Israel -- Time Is Running Out

President Barack Obama discusses his foreign policy -- Israel, Iran, Syria -- in an hourlong exclusive interview with Jeffrey Goldberg. 
Obama and Netanyahu in Israel in 2013. Will this week's talks in Washington bring them any closer? Photographer: Marc Israel Sellem-Pool/Getty Images
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When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits the White House tomorrow, President Barack Obama will tell him that his country could face a bleak future -- one of international isolation and demographic disaster -- if he refuses to endorse a U.S.-drafted framework agreement for peace with the Palestinians. Obama will warn Netanyahu that time is running out for Israel as a Jewish-majority democracy. And the president will make the case that Netanyahu, alone among Israelis, has the strength and political credibility to lead his people away from the precipice.

In an hourlong interview Thursday in the Oval Office, Obama, borrowing from the Jewish sage Rabbi Hillel, told me that his message to Netanyahu will be this: "If not now, when? And if not you, Mr. Prime Minister, then who?" He then took a sharper tone, saying that if Netanyahu "does not believe that a peace deal with the Palestinians is the right thing to do for Israel, then he needs to articulate an alternative approach." He added, "It's hard to come up with one that's plausible."