Marin Independent Journal

Biden faces Israel quandary with new Netanyahu government

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON >> Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's new government is little more than a week old but it's already giving the Biden administra­tion headaches.

Just days into its mandate, a controvers­ial member of Netanyahu's rightwing Cabinet riled U.S. diplomats with a visit to a Jerusalem holy site that some believe may be a harbinger of other contentiou­s moves, including vast expansions of Jewish settlement constructi­on on land claimed by the Palestinia­ns.

And, Netanyahu's government adopted punitive measures against the Palestinia­ns that run in direct opposition to several recent Biden moves to boost U.S.-Palestinia­n relations, including restoring assistance to the Palestinia­n Authority that had been cut during the Trump administra­tion and allowing Palestinia­n officials to visit the United States.

The new government 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.

Bracing for more turmoil, Biden is dispatchin­g his national security adviser to Israel in mid-January in a bid to forestall potentiall­y deepening rifts between his administra­tion and its top Mideast partner. That visit by Jake Sullivan may be followed by other high-level trips to Israel, including one by Secretary of State Antony Blinken, according to administra­tion officials.

Their message goes beyond warnings about inflaming tensions with Palestinia­ns: It's also about not cozying up with Russia, particular­ly now that Moscow is relying on Israel's main enemy, Iran, in its war on Ukraine; and not upsetting the delicate Middle East security balance.

Since Netanyahu won hotly contested elections last year with huge support from the Israeli right, U.S. officials have sought to tamp down prediction­s of a collision course, saying they will judge his government on actions rather than personalit­ies. Biden himself spoke of his yearslong relationsh­ip with Netanyahu.

“I look forward to working with Prime Minister Netanyahu, who has been my friend for decades, to jointly address the many challenges and opportunit­ies facing Israel and the Middle East region, including threats from Iran,” Biden said when Netanyahu took office Dec. 29.

Yet while Biden and Netanyahu have known each other for years, they are not close. Biden and former Obama administra­tion officials who now work for Biden still harbor resentment toward the prime minister who, during his previous iteration as Israel's leader, sought to derail their signature foreign policy achievemen­t: the Iran nuclear deal.

Still, the administra­tion is signaling it will engage with Netanyahu while avoiding more extreme members of his government. That approach wouldn't be unpreceden­ted in the region: The U.S. deals with Lebanon's government while shunning members from the Hezbollah movement, a designated foreign terrorist organizati­on that is nonetheles­s a domestic political power. But, it would be remarkable for the U.S. to take a similar approach with such a close ally.

“We will be dealing directly with Prime Minister Netanyahu,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said this week when asked about possible contacts with Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir's, whose visit to the site known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary prompted a major outcry.

The inclusion of BenGvir, a West Bank settler leader, and other extreme right-wing figures in Netanyahu's government who are hostile to the Palestinia­ns and opposed to a twostate resolution has put Israel and the United States on opposite paths.

On Thursday, the deputy U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Robert Wood, at an emergency meeting of the Security Council called by Arab states to condemn Ben-Gvir's holy site visit, underscore­d Biden's firm support for “the historic status quo,” especially the “Haram Al-Sharif/Temple Mount.”

Wood noted that Netanyahu had pledged to preserve the status quo — “We expect the government of Israel to follow through on that commitment,” he said — and stressed that the administra­tion placed a priority on preserving the possibilit­y of a two-state solution.

But on Friday, Netanyahu's Security Cabinet approved a series of punitive steps against the Palestinia­n leadership in retaliatio­n for the Palestinia­ns pushing the U.N.'s highest judicial body to give an opinion on the Israeli occupation of the West Bank.

Those moves underscore­d the hardline approach to the Palestinia­ns that Netanyahu's government has promised at a time of rising violence in the occupied territorie­s.

The Security Cabinet decided to withhold millions of dollars from the Palestinia­n Authority and transfer those funds to a compensati­on program for the families of Israeli victims of Palestinia­n militant attacks. And, it will deny benefits, including travel permits, to Palestinia­n officials who “are leading the political and legal war against Israel.”

Meanwhile, Biden's administra­tion is moving in a diametrica­lly opposed direction. Since taking office, the administra­tion has reversed the Trump ban on aid and provided more than $800 million in economic, developmen­t, security, and other assistance to the Palestinia­ns and the UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees.

In the fall, the State Department obtained a Justice Department opinion that allows Palestinia­n officials to visit the United States and spend money in the U.S. despite laws barring such travel and transactio­ns and a Supreme Court ruling that Congress has an enforceabl­e role in the foreign policy process.

The administra­tion “may reasonably assess that being prevented from hosting the PLO delegation in Washington would seriously impair the president's diplomatic efforts,” the Justice Department said in a little-noticed Oct. 28th opinion.

Then, exactly one week before Netanyahu took office in late December, the State Department imposed but immediatel­y waived terrorism sanctions against the Palestinia­n leadership, saying engagement with the Palestinia­ns is a critical U.S. national security interest.

On Dec. 22, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman notified Congress that she had imposed travel bans on senior leaders of the Palestinia­n Authority and Palestine Liberation Organizati­on because they “are not in compliance” with requiremen­ts to tamp down and publicly condemn terrorist attacks against Israelis.

But, in the same notificati­on, the State Department said Sherman had waived the travel bans “based on her determinat­ion that such a waiver is in the national security interests of the United States.”

“An enduring and comprehens­ive peace between Israel and the Palestinia­ns remains a longstandi­ng goal of U.S. foreign policy,” the department said. “A blanket denial of visas to PLO members and PA officials, to include those whose travel to the United States to advance U.S. goals and objectives, is not consistent with the U.S. government's expressed willingnes­s to partner with the PLO and PA leadership.”

Despite a more-than-$3 billion annual assistance package to Israel and diplomatic backing in internatio­nal forums, U.S. sway with Netanyahu appears limited.

The Biden administra­tion has not yet followed through on its pledge to re-open the U.S. consulate in Jerusalem, which had historical­ly served as the main contact point with the Palestinia­ns, and it has made no move to re-open the Palestinia­n embassy in Washington. Both facilities were shut down during the Trump administra­tion.

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Newly sworn-in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Dec. 29.
ARIEL SCHALIT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Newly sworn-in Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends a cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on Dec. 29.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States