Chattanooga Times Free Press

BIDEN’S BALANCING ACT IS THE ONLY CHOICE

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President Joe Biden’s voice may be more of a whisper than a roar these days, but on Thursday night, he was as loud and strong as he’s ever been.

“The terrorist group Hamas unleashed pure unadultera­ted evil in the world,” Biden said. “But sadly, the Jewish people know, perhaps better than anyone, that there is no limit to the depravity of people when they want to inflict pain on others.”

Condemning the corrosive forces of antisemiti­sm and Islamophob­ia, he said the United States would continue to support and arm Israel as it wages war against Hamas, and would also send millions of dollars in humanitari­an aid to Gaza to help ameliorate the effects of Israeli’s airstrikes and expanded blockade, which has cut off food, medicine, water and fuel to the area’s 2 million-plus impoverish­ed inhabitant­s.

Israel has the absolute right to exist in peace and defend itself; Palestinia­ns have the absolute right to self-determinat­ion and freedom. “We cannot give up on a two-state solution,” Biden said Thursday.

It is still difficult to contemplat­e the enormity of the gruesome Oct. 7 attacks on Israeli civilians, and the horrific price that so many Palestinia­n civilians are now being forced to pay. Both sides have suffered and will continue to suffer in unthinkabl­e ways.

On Wednesday, Anderson Cooper interviewe­d the sisters of Amit Man, a 22-year-old Israeli medic who spent hours exchanging messages with her family on WhatsApp from a clinic in a kibbutz as Hamas gunmen stalked and slaughtere­d her neighbors.

“I don’t think I’ll get out of here,” she wrote, moments before she was killed. “Please be strong if something happens to me.”

In Gaza, Palestinia­n parents have discussed whether to write their children’s names on their palms or on their backs, so that when they are killed, the family can be buried together.

“It feels like humanity is kind of deserting us in this moment,” Melanie Ward of Medical Aid for Palestinia­ns told Crooked Media as she relayed the conversati­on her Gaza director, Mahmoud Shalabi, said he’d had with his wife about how to mark their children.

Like most engaged Americans who lack any real Middle East expertise, I read as much as I can, and watch as much as I can.

I avoid offensive commentary from the “what did you expect?” factions of the American left and right. There is nothing on Earth — nothing — that can begin to justify the atrocities that Hamas unleashed on Israeli civilians. Anti-Israel demonstrat­ions like the one that took place recently at the Sydney Opera House, where pro-Palestinia­n protesters chanted “Gas the Jews,” and the letter by Harvard students blaming

Israel for the Hamas attacks are but two examples of the reprehensi­ble way this conflict has robbed so many of their humanity.

It is difficult to wade through the disinforma­tion, misinforma­tion and just plain confusion about what is happening on the ground in Gaza.

Like many, I was taken in by initial news reports, based on informatio­n from the Gaza Health Ministry, about who was to blame for the massive explosion last Tuesday at the Ahli Arab Hospital. The growing consensus from impartial sources — including open source investigat­ive sites like Bellingcat — is that the explosion was not consistent with an Israeli airstrike. Thursday, Biden said flatly that it “was not done by the Israelis.”

Each side may cling to its belief that the enemy did it.

But we must never let go of the desire to find a way for Palestinia­ns and Israelis alike to raise their families and live in peace.

Biden was correct to caution Israel against overreacti­ng in rage as the U.S. did so disastrous­ly after 9/11. If the U.S. is to support Israel in its war on Hamas, we must also be committed to alleviatin­g the suffering of the Palestinia­n people, who have once again been buffeted by forces over which they have no control.

At this point, what other choice do we have?

 ?? ?? Robin Abacrian
Robin Abacrian

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