Pakistan Today (Lahore)

BIDEN’S ULTIMATUM TO NETANYAHU: PROTECT GAZA CIVILIANS, OR ELSE

- WASHINGTON reuters

US President Joe Biden effectivel­y gave Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu an ultimatum on Thursday: protect Palestinia­n civilians and foreign aid workers in Gaza or Washington could rein in support for Israel in its war against Palestinia­n resistance group Hamas.

The message, after months of US calls for Israel to change its military tactics that have killed tens of thousands of innocent Palestinia­ns, followed an Israeli attack that killed seven World Central Kitchen (WCK) aid workers and triggered global outrage.

Israel claims the strike – which targeted the WCK convoy thrice – was a mistake.

The White House did not say exactly what steps it wanted Netanyahu to take, nor what it would do if he failed to take them. But analysts said the implicit threat was to slow US arms transfers to Israel or to temper US support at the UN.

“This is as close to a ‘come to Jesus’ moment as you can get,” said analyst Steven Cook of the Council on Foreign Relations think tank, referring to Biden’s comment last month that he and Netanyahu were heading for such a turning point. Dennis Ross, a veteran US diplomat now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy said, “The president, in effect, is saying meet these humanitari­an needs or I will have no choice but to condition (military) assistance.”

Biden, up for re-election in November, has struggled to balance pressure to rein in Netanyahu from progressiv­e democrats dismayed at the Palestinia­n civilian death toll against the risk that may alienate mostly proisrael independen­t voters. He has so far resisted setting conditions on arms transfers.

The war on Gaza has laid waste to much of the densely populated territory and displaced most of its 2.3 million people.

More than 33,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed, according to the health ministry in Gaza, of which most were women and children. Describing their call, the White House said Biden called 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”. “He made clear that US policy concerning Gaza will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these steps,” the White House added in a statement. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was more blunt.

“Look, I’ll just say this, if we don’t see the changes that we need to see, there will be changes in our policy.”

On Thursday evening, just hours after the call, the Israeli government announced several steps to increase aid flows to Gaza, including opening the Ashdod port and the Erez crossing into northern Gaza and increasing aid deliveries from Jordan. It was not clear if the steps would be enough to satisfy US demands.

TURNING POINT

The turning point for Biden, an ardent supporter of Israel, was Monday’s deadly Israeli attack on the workers from celebrity chef Jose Andres’ WCK charity group.

It came as the Biden administra­tion has been stepping up pressure on Israel to consider alternativ­es to a threatened ground offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a source familiar with the talks said the 30minute call was at times tense, with Biden spelling out his concerns and Netanyahu defending his approach on Gaza.

A senior White House official described the conversati­on as “very direct, very straightfo­rward,” saying it included Vice President Kamala Harris, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and Blinken.

As to what the United States expects, the official said, “We need a comprehens­ive plan on them doing a much better job here. They can’t be killing humanitari­an aid workers and civilians.”

While Biden has long avoided curtailing US support for Israel, he may finally have reached his limit.

“There was always going to be a point at which the Biden administra­tion felt that the domestic and internatio­nal cost of supporting Israel’s campaign in Gaza outweighed the benefit of what Israel was able to achieve on the ground,” said Mike Singh, a former National

Security Council official on the Middle East.

“What is remarkable is not that this is happening but that it took so long.”

Singh, now at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said if Israel did not meet Biden’s conditions, the likeliest step was the US negotiatin­g a UN Security Council resolution like the one that ended the 2006 Israel-hezbollah conflict.

“Placing conditions on arms transfers is more fraught politicall­y, would likely face stiff opposition on (Capitol) Hill, and could leave Israel vulnerable to attack by Hezbollah or other Iranian proxies,” he added.

Still, Biden may have telegraphe­d his thinking last month when, after saying a Rafah invasion would be a “red line,” he said he would never cut off “all weapons so that they don’t have the Iron Dome (missile defense system) to protect them.” He did not explicitly make such assurances about offensive weapons, fueling speculatio­n he could impose conditions on such arms transfers to Israel, which relies heavily on US arms.

Jonathan Panikoff, a former deputy national intelligen­ce officer on the Middle East, said Biden was unlikely to take drastic action upending Us-israeli ties, such as withholdin­g big-ticket weapons or completely abandoning Israel at the UN.

But he could put conditions on smaller military items and take further measures against extremist Jewish settlers involved in attacks on Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank.

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