Weekend Herald

Biden’s warning to Netanyahu

US backing of Israel on the line

- Analysis

If we don’t see the changes that we need to see, there’ll be changes in our own policy.

Antony Blinken, US Secretary of State

Benjamin Netanyahu is facing challenges on multiple fronts, with his domestic support appearing to erode at a time when internatio­nal fury and frustratio­n over the war in the Gaza Strip have reached new heights.

The Israeli leader has come under sharper criticism from allies like the United States as the civilian death toll climbs in Gaza, and the Israeli military’s killing there this week of seven aid workers has heightened global anger.

Yesterday, US President Joe Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken suggested American support for Israel was not unconditio­nal, in remarks that laid bare the growing divisions between Washington and Jerusalem.

In a phone call with Netanyahu, Biden called the strikes on relief workers and the broader humanitari­an crisis in Gaza “unacceptab­le”.

“He made clear the need for Israel to announce and implement a series of specific, concrete and measurable steps to address civilian harm, humanitari­an suffering and the safety of aid workers,” a White House statement said.

“He made clear that US policy with respect to Gaza will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these steps.”

Speaking to reporters at Nato headquarte­rs in Brussels, Blinken said, “With regard to our policy in Gaza, look, I’ll just say this: If we don’t see the changes that we need to see, there’ll be changes in our own policy.”

Within hours, the Biden administra­tion said , “at the President’s request”, Israel had announced more aid crossings into Gaza, agreeing to use the Ashdod port to direct aid into Gaza, to open the Erez crossing into northern Gaza for the first time since the Hamas terrorist attack on October 7 and to significan­tly increase deliveries from Jordan.

At home, Netanyahu, who has outlasted many prediction­s of his political demise, has been confronted with protests, divisions within his Government and falling approval ratings in opinion polls.

On Thursday, Benny Gantz, a former general who is a key member of Netanyahu’s war Cabinet, heaped more pressure on the Prime Minister by calling for early elections.

A popular political rival to Netanyahu, Gantz said elections should be held in September — just before the one-year mark of the war. (New elections in Israel are not legally required until late October 2026.)

Elections in September “will leave us time to continue the security effort, and it will allow Israeli citizens to know that we will soon need to renew the trust between us,” he said. “It will prevent the rupture among the people.”

Gantz’s remarks underscore­d how government unity since October 7 was showing signs of strain nearly six months into the war. An opposition leader, Gantz crossed parliament­ary lines after the attack to join the Netanyahu war Cabinet as an emergency measure.

Gantz did not suggest he would quit the war Cabinet, and if he were to, that alone would not topple the Government; his centrist party is not part of Netanyahu’s far-right Governing coalition, which holds 64 seats in the 120-member parliament. But it would dismantle the emergency wartime leadership team formed after October 7, along with the air of solidarity it created, potentiall­y creating more momentum for new elections.

Gantz’s words echoed the calls of thousands of anti-government protesters who filled the streets outside the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem this week in a four-day demonstrat­ion to demand early elections and Netanyahu’s ouster.

At the same time, Netanyahu has faced sharp criticism from his farright coalition partners, Itamar BenGvir and Bezalel Smotrich, over any indication that he is hesitating in the war against Hamas or in the expansion of Israeli settlement­s in the occupied West Bank. Unlike Gantz, they have the power to make the government fall and to force elections by leaving the coalition.

The pressure comes as Biden administra­tion officials are expressing more open frustratio­n with Netanyahu’s prosecutio­n of the war and the humanitari­an crisis in Gaza.

In a tense phone call on Thursday, US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin criticised his Israeli counterpar­t, Yoav Gallant, over the deadly attack on the aid workers, including a dual USCanadian citizen. According to a Pentagon account of the call, Austin expressed “outrage” at the attack — a significan­t change in tone from their previous calls.

Despite the tough language, the Biden administra­tion did not directly threaten to halt the flow of American munitions to Israel or place conditions on their transfer, as many congressio­nal Democrats are now urging.

“I’m not going to preview any potential policy decisions coming forward,” John Kirby, a White House spokespers­on, said yesterday.

“What we want to see are some real changes on the Israeli side,” he said, including a significan­t increase in humanitari­an aid, additional border crossings into Gaza and a reduction in violence against civilians and aid workers.

Israel has called the strike a tragic mistake that resulted from a “misidentif­ication” but has not offered further details.

Another Israeli ally, Britain, is also coming under more pressure to curtail its support for Israel; three of the seven World Central Kitchen workers who were killed were Britons. On Thursday, more than 600 lawyers and retired judges sent a letter to the British Government, urging it to suspend weapons sales to Israel, arguing that they violated internatio­nal law.

The letter cited the risk of famine in Gaza, a planned Israeli military assault on the crowded city of Rafah, in southern Gaza, and a finding by the UN’s top court that there was a “plausible risk” of genocide in Gaza.

Among the signatorie­s were Brenda Hale, a former President of Britain’s Supreme Court; Jonathan Sumption and Nicholas Wilson, former justices on the court; and dozens of the country’s most prominent lawyers.

The internatio­nal pressure to suspend military sales to Israel came as the Israeli military said that it was canceling leave for combat units and blocking GPS signals. The Israeli military did not explicitly cite the reason behind the moves, but Israeli newspapers noted that it came amid fears of an increased threat from Iran.

Israeli officials have also suggested that increased cross-border fighting between their forces and Hezbollah, the Lebanese militia backed by Iran, could prompt a much larger military response by Israel than it has mounted so far.

Iranian leaders have vowed to punish Israel for killing top Iranian commanders this week in an airstrike in Syria. The attack was one of the deadliest in a decades-long shadow war between the two enemies, and US officials have voiced concerns it could prompt retaliator­y strikes against Israel or the United States.

As outrage continues to boil over the killing of the aid workers this week, their employer, World Central Kitchen, called for an independen­t investigat­ion into the attack and asked Australia, Britain, Canada, the United States and Poland, whose citizens were among the victims, to join it in demanding an outside inquiry.

World Central Kitchen also called on Israel to preserve documentat­ion related to the strikes, and pushed back on Netanyahu’s assertion that strikes, while “tragic” and unintentio­nal, were something that “happens in war.”

“This was a military attack that involved multiple strikes and targeted three WCK vehicles,” the statement said. “All three vehicles were carrying civilians; they were marked as WCK vehicles; and their movements were in full compliance with Israeli authoritie­s.”

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 ?? Photos / AP, 123RF ?? Buildings destroyed by Israeli airstrikes on Jabalia refugee camp on the outskirts of Gaza City.
Photos / AP, 123RF Buildings destroyed by Israeli airstrikes on Jabalia refugee camp on the outskirts of Gaza City.

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