Taipei Times

US has fired a first diplomatic shot at Israel

While Israel should eliminate Hamas’ fighters, its plans to invade Rafah might lead to a tipping point in its global positionin­g

- BY ANDREAS KLUTH

“Abstention” is a deceptivel­y diplomatic word, implying some sort of bureaucrat­ic omission. And yet this week’s decision by the US to abstain from casting its veto in the UN Security Council turned a page in history. For the first time since the terrorist attack by Hamas against Israel on Oct. 7 last year — and after nixing three previous draft resolution­s to this effect — Washington has allowed the council to call for an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.

And so the US-Israeli relationsh­ip, long among the world’s tightest bilateral bonds, keeps fraying beyond recognitio­n.

In December last year, I predicted that US President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu would break first gradually, then suddenly. Well, suddenly just came a lot closer.

The Biden administra­tion tried to talk the abstention down, saying that there had been no “shift in policy” and pointing out that the resolution also calls for the release of all hostages. However, Bibi was still irate enough to cancel a trip by an Israeli delegation to Washington that was meant to patch things.

And yet his own war tactics and missing peace strategy forced the US and UN to reach this point (the other 14 members of the Security Council all voted in favor).

The Netanyahu government’s bombing of the Gaza Strip has, as Biden put it, been “indiscrimi­nate” at times, its facilitati­on of humanitari­an aid has been inadequate and its plans to invade the city of Rafah seem reckless. More than 1 million Gazan civilians, having fled their homes, are huddling there, alongside the remaining Hamas fighters who Israel wants (and ought) to eliminate.

However, a full-bore assault on Rafah would cause another humanitari­an catastroph­e, which is why US Vice President Kamala Harris was the latest Cabinet member to warn off Netanyahu.

She is “ruling out nothing” if Bibi still goes ahead, she added.

With the death toll in Gaza above 32,000 and rising, and famine imminent, the US seems finally to have drawn a red line.

If there was a psychologi­cal tipping point stateside, it came this month, when the US’ highest-ranking elected official of Jewish faith, US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, found controvers­ial but moving words for this historical moment.

Israel “cannot survive if it becomes a pariah,” he said, adding that Netanyahu increasing­ly conflates his personal interests with Israel’s.

So Israel should hold new elections, Schumer suggested.

The senator left no doubt that he hopes a new Israeli government will exclude far-right extremists such as those in Netanyahu’s coalition and will instead join the US in working toward Palestinia­n statehood as the means to achieving peace one day.

Netanyahu and his US allies on the Republican right howled at what they called interferen­ce in the democratic politics of an ally. That is rich coming from Bibi, who has spent much of the past three decades trying to manipulate US politics. He has long cultivated links to the evangelica­l and nationalis­t American right. In 2015, he took up a Republican invitation to address a joint session of the

US Congress in a snub to Barack Obama, the Democratic president at the time, who demonstrat­ively failed to invite Bibi to the White House on the occasion.

Now there is talk again of Netanyahu addressing Congress.

Many Democrats this time say they would boycott the speech.

The reality is that US and Israeli politics have been intertwine­d for a long time and if one side wants to address the electorate of the other, the privilege must extend in the opposite direction as well. So let Bibi talk directly to Americans and Schumer or Biden to Israelis.

Even such back-and-forth, though, cannot distract from the fundamenta­l asymmetry in the relationsh­ip. It is Israel that needs the US, not the other way around. The Jewish state relies on US diplomatic protection at the UN, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice and other institutio­ns, and it needs US money, shells and bombs.

The US, for its part, cannot indefinite­ly supply those weapons if it then sees them dropped on Gazan combatants and civilians alike, in what might, according to non-government­al organizati­ons, be violations of internatio­nal humanitari­an as well as US law.

And so the two government­s appear to have boxed themselves in. Netanyahu last week told US Secretary of State Antony Blinken that Israel would invade Rafah and that “if necessary, we will do it alone,” even without US support.

Such a campaign would contravene repeated messages from the White House and now also the Security Council’s call for a ceasefire.

If that act went uncensured, it would make internatio­nal law and the UN, which the US once helped build and which has already lost credibilit­y, irrelevant. The US might as well walk away from its entire post-World War II legacy.

This is the tragedy of the moment. By the looks of it, Netanyahu will soon give the order to attack Rafah, killing more terrorists, but also causing even worse suffering for the 2 million civilians in the Gaza Strip, and even more isolation of Israel in the world.

The US will then have to answer, by restrictin­g arms shipments and letting the UN condemn Israel. When that time comes, the US might not even abstain.

Andreas Kluth is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering US diplomacy, national security and geopolitic­s. Previously, he was editor-in-chief of Handelsbla­tt Global and a writer for The Economist.

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