Chattanooga Times Free Press

Biden adviser meets Netanyahu amid unease over his government

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JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met Thursday with U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, the two allies’ highest level in-person talks since Israel’s most right-wing government ever took power last month.

Sullivan’s visit comes amid unease in Washington over Netanyahu’s policies and over several members of his ultranatio­nalist and ultra-Orthodox governing coalition, which is already taking a hard line against the Palestinia­ns and is expected to ramp up constructi­on in Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank.

Later Thursday, Sullivan met with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, who appealed to the Biden administra­tion to stop the Israeli government from pressing ahead with escalatory measures against the Palestinia­ns.

The new Israeli coalition’s policies “are destroying the remaining chances of achieving peace and stability in the region,” Abbas told Sullivan, according to a statement from his office. He urged the United States “to intervene before it is too late to stop these unilateral measures.”

In Jerusalem, a statement from Netanyahu’s office said the two discussed Iran’s nuclear program and ways to broaden normalizat­ion agreements reached under the Trump administra­tion with four Arab countries.

“I’ve known President (Joe) Biden for 40 years as a great friend of Israel,” Netanyahu told Sullivan, according to footage released from the meeting. “We see you as a trusted partner in matters of assuring security and, of course, advancing peace.”

Sullivan told Netanyahu that Biden’s “commitment to the state of Israel is bone deep,” a “commitment that’s rooted in shared history, shared interests and shared values.”

Israel’s new government has already proven to be a headache for the Biden administra­tion, with extremist Cabinet minister Itamar Ben-Gvir visiting a flashpoint Jerusalem holy site and the coalition taking combative steps against the Palestinia­n Authority that run counter to Biden’s efforts to boost U.S.-Palestinia­n relations.

Netanyahu told Sullivan that the measures, including halting Palestinia­n constructi­on in parts of the West Bank and withholdin­g badly needed tax revenues from the PA that Israel collects on its behalf, represente­d a necessary response to the Palestinia­ns pushing the U.N.’s highest judicial body to give its opinion on the Israeli occupation.

From Ramallah, the seat of the Palestinia­n Authority, Abbas stressed to Sullivan the importance of the U.S. exerting pressure on Israel to halt its settlement constructi­on and its “daily killings and incursions into Palestinia­n cities and towns.”

Two Palestinia­ns were killed in an Israeli military arrest raid into Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank on Thursday. Last year was the deadliest for Palestinia­ns in the West Bank in 18 years.

Abbas also called on Sullivan to reverse the Trump administra­tion’s punitive steps against the Palestinia­ns by restoring the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem that oversees American ties to Palestinia­ns in the West Bank and reopening the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on’s office in Washington.

Israel’s new far-right government and a potential escalation in the decades-old conflict is an unwelcome complicati­on for a Biden national security team seeking to shift attention away from the Middle East and toward rivals like China and Russia. It also comes as Republican­s take control of the House of Representa­tives and are eager to cast Biden as unfriendly to Israel ahead of the 2024 presidenti­al election.

 ?? MENAHEM KAHANA/POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, arrives Sunday for a weekly cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem.
MENAHEM KAHANA/POOL PHOTO VIA AP Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, arrives Sunday for a weekly cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem.

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