Kuwait Times

Middle East strife drags in reluctant Biden

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Joe Biden entered the White House hoping to avoid entangleme­nt in the Zionist-Palestinia­n conflict. But, like US presidents before him, a crisis is dragging him in sooner than he would have liked. The flare-up in violence is putting Biden on a tightrope not only diplomatic­ally but also at home, where progressiv­es in his Democratic Party are increasing­ly vocal in criticism of Zionist entity, which enjoyed zealous support from former president Donald Trump.

“You can appreciate that the Biden administra­tion looks at this as a low-value, low-return enterprise fraught with political risk,” said Aaron David Miller, a longtime US negotiator on the Middle East. “There are no prospects of any success at all on this issue. You don’t have leaders on either side who are willing to make decisions,” said Miller, now at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace.

“The absolute best that the Biden administra­tion could achieve in this conflict would be tamping down the violence,” he said. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan since last week have been looking to restore calm as tensions soared over Zionist entity’s potential eviction of Palestinia­ns from east Jerusalem, which the Jewish state sees as part of its eternal capital but is considered occupied by the United Nations.

Following US appeals, the Zionist entity postponed a court ruling and rerouted a flashpoint march. But hundreds of Palestinia­ns were injured in clashes with police, and the Islamist movement Hamas-which controls the Gaza Strip-fired rockets as it demanded the occupation forces leave the Al-Aqsa mosque compound, holy to Muslims. The Zionist forces responded with fierce attacks by fighter jets and helicopter­s, with at least 50 Palestinia­ns now killed in the violence since Monday evening. Successive US presidents have tried to tread carefully on the Middle East in their first months, and the Biden administra­tion had made explicit it was in no rush on peacemakin­g, especially with question marks over the futures of both Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinia­n President Mahmud Abbas.

 ?? — AFP ?? WASHINGTON, DC: President Joe Biden is displayed on a monitor in the press briefing room while he attends a virtual meeting with governors at the White House Tuesday in Washington, DC.
— AFP WASHINGTON, DC: President Joe Biden is displayed on a monitor in the press briefing room while he attends a virtual meeting with governors at the White House Tuesday in Washington, DC.

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