April
7, 2024
The
Biden administration has insisted there's very little it can do to alter policy
in the region and acted as though Israel's policy decisions are unconnected to
the United States, the country that gives them more than $4 billion a year in
military aid.
Tthe United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East receives humanitarian aid brought by first
convoy of relief trucks in Rafah, Gaza on October 21, 2023. (Photo: Mustafa Hassona/Anadolu via Getty Images)
On
Thursday, The White House released a readout summarizing a phone call between
President Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Biden
called for an immediate ceasefire during the chat, saying it was “essential to
stabilize and improve the humanitarian situation and protect innocent
civilians.” He also called on Israel to take concrete steps to protect aid
workers and implied that U.S. policy in the region could shift if Netanyahu did
not heed the call. Biden’s request came days after an Israel strike in the Gaza
Strip killed 7 employees of the humanitarian organization World Central Kitchen
and sparked global outrage.
Today
Israel announced that it’s reprimanding the soldiers connected to that killing
and reopening the Erez border crossing between Israel and North Gaza. In other
words, Biden’s gentle rebuke has resulted in some minor changes to Israeli
policy.
The
sequence of events is not surprising. There’s a long history of Israel changing
course at the request of the United States, a country that it relies on for
vast amounts of military aid. Reagan suspended the delivery of fighter jets to
the country after it bombed an Iraqi nuclear reactor and pressured Menachem
Begin to end his bombardment on Lebanon. George H.W. Bush withheld loan
guarantees to make Yitzhak Shamir halt settlement expansion.
We’ve
even seen examples of this dynamic during Biden’s presidency. Franklin Foer’s
book The Last Politician: Inside Joe Biden’s White House and the Struggle for
America’s Future, details conversations between Biden and Netanyahu that
occurred during Israel’s 2021 assault on Gaza.
Biden
“held his tongue” after Israel bombed a 12-story building that served as a home
base for journalists in Gaza City, and the attacks continued. However, later in
the campaign, Biden instructed the Prime Minister to wrap things up. Netanyahu
insisted he needed more time to bomb, but Biden reportedly told him, “Hey, man,
we are out of runway here. It’s over.”
Netanyahu
begrudgingly agreed to a ceasefire days later.
Again,
none of this is especially surprising. However, for months the Biden
administration has insisted there’s very little it can do to alter policy in
the region and acted as though Israel’s policy decisions are unconnected to the
United States, the country that gives them more than $4 billion a year in
military aid.
This
narrative is consistently pushed during press briefings.
Here’s
a typical example from February 27, in which State Department spokesman Matthew
Miller was asked about the tools it has to influence Israel.
“So
one thing I will say about that that people often tend to forget is that
Israel, like other countries in the region, is a sovereign country that makes
its own decisions,” claimed Miller. “The United States does not dictate to
Israel what it must do, just as we don’t dictate to any country what it must
do.”
Miller
made a similar statement the following month, when he was asked about Israel
invading Rafah.
“We
can’t dictate to them,” he told reporters. “They’re a sovereign country, and
the United States can’t dictate to any sovereign country. They’re going to make
their own decisions, and they have been quite clear about that, and we would
expect nothing less from any sovereign country.”
This
lie isn’t only being promulgated by The White House, it’s also embraced by much
of the mainstream media. We saw many examples of it in the weeks after October
7th attack.
“Biden
Confronts the Limits of U.S. Leverage in Two Conflicts,” reads the headline of
a November 6 New York Times piece from this genre. The article frames the most
powerful man in the world as a constrained actor, unable to make much of a
difference. “For 10 days, the Biden administration has been urging Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to allow for ‘humanitarian pauses’ in the bombing
of Gaza, hoping that the $3.8 billion a year in American security assistance
would carry with it enough influence over the Israeli leader’s tactics,” Sanger
assures readers. “It has not. Mr. Netanyahu rebuffed Mr. Biden’s push for
greater efforts to avoid civilian casualties…”
Sanger
quotes Representative Massachusetts Congressman and former Marine Seth Moulton.
“There is a long history of U.S. presidents realizing they don’t have as much
leverage over Israel as they thought,” he declares, without providing any
examples.
As
the Palestinian death toll has grown and the atrocities have continued, this
position has begun to dissipate throughout elite opinion.
After
Biden put out a statement expressing his anger and heartbreak over the death of
the 7 aid workers, David Sanger co-wrote a much different piece at the Times.
This was the headline for that one: “Biden Is ‘Outraged.’ But Is He Willing to
Use America’s Leverage With Israel?”
“Conditions
on how American arms are used are usually standard fare, some imposed by
Congress and others by the president or secretary of state,” explains the
article. “…But Israel has always been the exception. Even when Senator Chuck
Schumer, Democrat of New York and the majority leader, gave an impassioned
speech urging new elections in Israel — a clear effort to oust Mr. Netanyahu —
he declined to call for limits on arms. When pressed the next day, Mr. Schumer
said he did not even want to discuss the topic.”
“There
are other steps Mr. Biden could demand,” it continues. “For example, the United
States could insist that aid convoys be escorted by the Israel Defense Forces,
or that nearby Israeli military units remain in constant communication with the
aid providers, an issue two U.S. senators raised to Mr. Netanyahu in February.”
This
crack in the consensus was best conveyed on a recent episode of MSNBC’s Morning
Joe by Elise Jordan, a political analyst, former National Security Council aide
and speechwriter for Condoleezza Rice.
“I
am so sick of hearing how President Biden is,” Jordan told the panel. “The buck
stops with him; if he wants to stop the arms sales and the bombs that are
killing civilians, he can. He has the power. We don’t need his aides going to
reporters and talking about how upset they are.”
“What
happened yesterday is still going to happen…we don’t need to be getting any
more arms or money, and it needs to stop and be conditional. It’s ridiculous,
it’s going on unchecked and unfettered, and we are sitting around and talking
about how upset we are while we hemorrhage billions of dollars,” she continued.
It
is ridiculous, and Biden could stop this charade anytime.
No comments:
Post a Comment