The Pak Banker

Rafah offensive warns to break Biden-Netanyahu ties

- Osama Al-Sharif

Israel’s plan to launch a ground offensive into the heavily populated enclave of Rafah, nestled close to the Egyptian border in the Gaza Strip, could bring relations between US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a tipping point.

Netanyahu has angered the White House by ignoring US warnings regarding the planned incursion into Rafah, where more than 1.4 million Palestinia­ns have sought refuge and are living under horrendous conditions.

Already, Biden has changed his tone on Israel’s four-month war on Gaza by calling the Israeli response “over the top,” in reference to the killing of more than 28,000 Palestinia­ns so far and the vast destructio­n of at least 60 percent of civilian infrastruc­ture, rendering more than 1.8 million people homeless and displaced.

Privately, Biden is reported to have used foul language to describe Netanyahu’s rebuff of US attempts to conclude a negotiated, lengthy truce coupled with the release of captives. Instead, Netanyahu rejected what he called Hamas’ “delusional demands,” which included a conditiona­l ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, and vowed to push into Rafah to secure a decisive victory.

Israel’s announceme­nt that it plans to launch a ground operation in Rafah has been rejected by the EU, the UK and the UN, as well as Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt. All have warned that such an incursion will result in a horrific human toll. Rafah has become a tent city, where tens of thousands of Gazans have fled from Gaza City, Jabalia, Bureij and other refugee camps, as well as Khan Younis, where Israel has said it dismantled Hamas’ main operationa­l headquarte­rs and killed thousands of its fighters.

It now says it needs to enter and clear Rafah of the last four battalions belonging to Hamas. It also believes most of the Israeli captives are being held there.

In response to the fact that Rafah is now home to over a million Gazans, Netanyahu has ordered his army to prepare an evacuation plan, without offering much detail. He suggested that Rafah residents head to the northern part of the Strip, but the UN and other aid agencies warned that much of the north has become a wasteland with no access to humanitari­an aid.

The logistics of moving such vast numbers of civilians, already suffering from malnutriti­on and disease, debunks Netanyahu’s suggestion that his army has the safety of civilians as a priority. Hundreds of Palestinia­ns have been killed by the Israeli military as they fled to so-called safe areas in the recent past.

But it is not only the fear of a bloodbath straining Biden’s relationsh­ip with Netanyahu. To balance his unequivoca­l support of Israel since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack, Biden has promised to open a clear path toward the fulfillmen­t of a two-state solution, i.e., the creation of a Palestinia­n state.

Netanyahu has flatly rejected Biden’s premise and vowed that Israel will have absolute control over all the territorie­s west of the River Jordan.

Added to this, he has also brushed off

Biden’s suggestion that Gaza is part of the future Palestinia­n state and that the Palestinia­n Authority must take over once Hamas is defeated. Netanyahu has affirmed that Israel will have complete and indefinite security control over Gaza.

His far-right coalition government has also been carrying out security operations in the West Bank, killing hundreds of Palestinia­n civilians and destroying infrastruc­ture and allowing Jewish settlers to go on the rampage, terrorizin­g Arab residents. Extremist ministers in his Cabinet have been taking steps to weaken and defund the PA.

At the same time, Netanyahu himself has said that he will not repeat the historical mistake of Oslo that created the PA.

Biden faces pressure from America’s Arab allies. For Egypt, a Rafah offensive will almost certainly push tens of thousands of fleeing Palestinia­ns across the border and into Sinai.

So worried is Cairo that it has deployed tanks and air defense systems close to the border. Egypt has also told Israel that it taking control of the so-called Philadelph­i Corridor will not be tolerated.

Its most recent warning to Israel hinted that any breach could lead to the suspension of the peace treaty between the two. The Biden administra­tion had hoped to entice Netanyahu by reviving normalizat­ion talks between Saudi Arabia and Israel.

But Riyadh dampened Washington’s hopes by stressing that Israel must first end the war in Gaza and commit to a clear path toward a Palestinia­n state before such talks can commence.

America’s Arab allies now believe that the Biden administra­tion has no leverage over Netanyahu, whose defiance has humiliated and frustrated the US administra­tion.

They want to see regional de-escalation taking place, especially as Israeli crimes in Gaza have inflamed popular sentiments and heightened tensions in south Lebanon, the Red Sea, Iraq and Syria.

But for Biden, Israel’s war has also become a domestic issue in a decisive election year. Polls show that young Democratic voters are overwhelmi­ngly opposed to his support of Israel and are in favor of an immediate ceasefire.

Polls also show that Biden is at risk of losing the Arab American and Muslim American votes in November because of the war in Gaza.

“He suggested that Rafah residents head to the northern part of the Strip, but the UN and other aid agencies warned that much of the north has become a wasteland with no access to humanitari­an aid. The logistics of moving such vast numbers of civilians, already suffering from malnutriti­on and disease, debunks Netanyahu’s suggestion that his army has the safety of civilians as a priority. Hundreds of Palestinia­ns have been killed by the Israeli military as they fled to so-called safe areas in the recent past. But it is not only the fear of a bloodbath straining Biden’s relationsh­ip with Netanyahu.”

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