Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. senators led to shelter on Israeli trip

Bipartisan group waits out rocket attack from Hamas

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

AVIV, Israel — U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer said on social media that a bipartisan group of senators — a delegation that included Nevada Democrat Jacky Rosen — was rushed to a shelter in Tel Aviv on Sunday to wait out a rocket attack from Hamas. Schumer, D-N.Y., posted a photo of himself and Republican Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah in the shelter.

Rosen did not appear to be in the photo.

“It shows you what Israelis have to go through. We must provide Israel with the support required to defend itself,” Schumer said on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

Schumer, the highest-ranking Jewish elected official in the United States, took the trip to show support for Israel ahead of an expected request from President Joe Biden for Congress to approve wartime funding for Israel as well as Ukraine. Schumer has said he would also hold discussion­s with Israeli officials regarding what kind of support the country would need for both military and humanitari­an operations.

Rosen is Jewish as well.

Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona were also on the trip.

Biden is considerin­g a trip to Israel in the coming days but no travel has been finalized, a senior administra­tion official said Sunday.

Biden has staunchly proclaimed his support for Israel, and a trip there would be the firmest signal yet but would come amid heightenin­g fears that a looming Israeli move into Gaza could spark a wider war with devastatin­g humanitari­an consequenc­es.

The official could not publicly discuss internal deliberati­ons about the potential presidenti­al travel and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has already been traveling around the Mideast this past week trying to prevent the war with Hamas from igniting a broader regional conflict.

But Biden also made his strongest public effort yet to restrain Israel after the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas that killed more than 1,300 people including at least 30 U.S. citizens, warning in an interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes”

that aired Sunday that Israel should not reoccupy Gaza.

“I think it’d be a big mistake,” Biden said. “Look, what happened in Gaza, in my view, is Hamas, and the extreme elements of Hamas don’t represent all the Palestinia­n people. And I think that it would be a mistake for Israel to occupy Gaza again.”

Still, he said, “taking out the extremists … is a necessary requiremen­t.”

Biden and his administra­tion officials have refused to criticize Israel or its bombing campaign that has killed civilians in Gaza. But they’ve urged Israel, Egypt and other nations to allow for humanitari­an aid and supplies into the worsening conflict zone.

“I’m confident that Israel is going to act under the rules of war,” Biden said in the interview. “There’s standards that democratic institutio­ns and countries go by. And I’m confident that there’s going to be an ability for the innocents in Gaza to be able to have access to medicine and food and water.”

Blinken, meanwhile, heard criticism of Israel’s military operation from Egypt President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi. After Cairo he traveled on to Jordan and planned to return to Israel today, carrying to Israeli leaders the feedback he received in a rush of meetings with leaders throughout the Arab world.

Egypt’s state-run media said el-Sissi told Blinken that Israel’s Gaza operation has exceeded “the right of self-defense” and turned into “a collective punishment.”

Blinken told reporters before leaving Egypt that “Israel has the right, indeed it has the obligation to defend itself against these attacks from Hamas and to try to do what it can to make sure that this never happens again.” Mindful of the potential human cost in Gaza, Blinken said “the way that Israel does this matters. It needs to do it in a way that affirms the shared values that we have for human life and human dignity, taking every possible precaution to avoid harming civilians.”

Earlier Sunday, the envoy met with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh, talks that built upon earlier sessions with the leaders of the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar, Jordan and the Palestinia­n Authority.

Blinken said that what he heard in every meeting with Arab leaders “was a determinat­ion of shared view that we have to do everything possible to make sure this doesn’t spread to other places, a shared view to safeguard innocent lives, a shared view to get assistance to Palestinia­ns in Gaza who need it and we’re working very much on that.”

The White House also appointed David Satterfiel­d, a former ambassador to Lebanon and Turkey, to lead U.S. efforts to get humanitari­an assistance to “vulnerable people through the Middle East.” Satterfiel­d was expected to arrive in Israel on Monday.

From Washington, Biden’s national security adviser said the U.S. was not “making requests or demands of Israel with respect to its military operations.” Jake Sullivan, making the rounds of the Sunday TV news shows, said the administra­tion was “simply stating our basic principles — the principles upon which this country is based and all democracie­s, including Israel, are based. It’s what makes us different from the terrorists, that in fact we respect civilian life.”

He said the U.S. was “not interferin­g in their military planning or trying to give them instructio­ns or requests specific.” Sullivan said the U.S. is conveying the message in public and in private that “all military operations should be conducted consistent with law of war, that civilians should be protected, that civilians should have a real opportunit­y to get to safety” and have access to food, water, medicine and shelter.

Those remarks marked a shift in the U.S. administra­tion’s comments in recent days as officials have heard concerns from Arab leaders. Those leaders expressed the consequenc­es of what a humanitari­an catastroph­e resulting from an Israeli ground offensive would do not only to Palestinia­ns but also in inflaming public opinions in Arab nations and potentiall­y destabiliz­ing relatively friendly countries.

Sullivan also said the U.S. has been unable so far to get American citizens out of Gaza through Egypt’s Rafah crossing with Gaza.

Blinken made clear in Egypt that the U.S. will not waver in supporting Israel, saying, “We will stand with it today, tomorrow and every day and we’re doing that in word and also in deed.”

In his roughly hourlong meeting with Prince Mohammed at the de facto Saudi leader’s private farm outside Riyadh, Blinken “highlighte­d the United States’ unwavering focus on halting terrorist attacks by Hamas, securing the release of all hostages, and preventing the conflict from spreading,” the State Department said.

“The two affirmed their shared commitment to protecting civilians and to advancing stability across the Middle East and beyond,” according to a department statement.

The Saudi descriptio­n of the meeting focused primarily on Palestinia­n civilians, echoing the sentiments of the other Arab leaders with whom Blinken has met. It said Saudi Arabia would object to the targeting of “civilians in any way or disrupt[ing] infrastruc­ture and vital interests that affect their daily lives.”

The prince “stressed the need to work to discuss ways to stop the military operations that claimed the lives of innocent people,” the Saudi Press Agency said in a report about the meeting.

 ?? (AP/Ariel Schalit) ?? Smoke rises Sunday following an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel.
(AP/Ariel Schalit) Smoke rises Sunday following an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel.

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