Of all the dishonesty on Foxnews, Hannity arises as the predominant liar of all their talking heads.

Here he is accusing President Obama of telling Israel that they have to return to their 1967 borders. The President said no such thing. In fact what he said was: "We believe the borders of Israel and Palestine should be based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed swaps, so that secure and recognized borders are established for both states." The '1967 lines' refer to the demarcation of Israel in 1947 by UN Resolution 181 and were still observed until the 6-day war of 1967 between Israel and some Arab neighbors [see below].
So for Hannity to claim that the President wants Israel to retreat to within those borders is factually a lie. Here is what the President said: [click]
It is unclear what PM Netanyahu meant when he referred to the '1967 lines'. Did he mean to actually withdraw to within those borders, or whether to use the 1967 lines as a starting point for negotiations in a peace settlement [click] for Netanyahu reply.

It appears that both Karl Rove and the Prime Minister have taken their cue from Hannity and are spewing the same lie.

Just for good measure, here is what G.W. Bush said and Ehud Olmert said in 2005 and 2008 [click]

The State of Israel's borders: here

"The State of Israel owes its entire legal existence to the proper exercise by Great Britain of its League of Nations' Mandatory Power over the territory of Palestine. It owes nothing to the United Nations and, by the same token, cannot claim any additional rights from the United Nations. Instead, as soon as Resolution 181 [November 29, 1947] was passed (and of course Great Britain voted in its favor), the legal borders between Israel and Palestine were forever fixed. Those borders henceforth could only be changed by one of two processes: first, explicit agreement between Israel and the authorized representatives of Palestine, and second, in the few cases of limited disputed areas where the verbal description contained in Resolution 181 was ambiguous in terms of existing maps or surveys, by international arbitration."
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