Albany Times Union

Biden, in Israel, pledges solidarity

President shares in grief, but urges caution

- By Peter Baker

TEL AVIV, Israel — As President Joe Biden slowly made his way around a hotel conference room, each of the survivors or relatives of victims of the devastatin­g Hamas attacks in Israel told him their story of tragedy or defiance. One by one, he gave each of them a hug and talked about his own experience­s with loss.

In a way, Biden flew to Israel on Wednesday to give the whole country a hug, to say how much America grieves with Israel and stands by Israel and has Israel’s back. But with the hug came a whisper in the ear as well, a gentle warning not to give into the “primal feeling,” not to let overwhelmi­ng grief or overpoweri­ng anger drive the country to go too far as he believes America did after Sept. 11, 2001.

“Shock, pain, rage — an allconsumi­ng rage,” Biden said later in a speech to the Israeli nation. “I understand and many Americans understand. You can’t look at what has happened here to your mothers, your fathers, your grandparen­ts, sons, daughters, children, even babies and not scream out for justice. Justice must be done. But I caution this — while you feel that rage, don’t be consumed by it. After 9/11, we were enraged in the United States. While we sought justice and got justice, we also made mistakes.”

Biden did not elaborate, but he presumably was referring to the invasion of Iraq, which he voted for as a senator and later came to regret. Nor did he explain what he meant in Israel’s case, but the meaning was clear enough. As Israel seeks to destroy Hamas, which killed more than 1,400 people

and took nearly 200 hostages, his message was that it should not give into excesses that cause unnecessar­y loss of innocent life — and in the process, squander the world’s sympathy the way the United States eventually did two decades ago.

The president announced $100 million in aid to help civilians in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, but it is not clear how much he got through to Israel’s leaders as they pound Gaza with punishing airstrikes and prepare for a possible treacherou­s ground invasion. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel clearly heard and welcomed the notes of solidarity; he made no mention of the recommenda­tions of restraint.

Biden also said his administra­tion planned to request from Congress an “unpreceden­ted” package of aid for Israel. Aides familiar with the plan said about $10 billion in mostly military assistance for Israel would be part of a roughly $100 billion request for emergency funds that would also help Ukraine and Taiwan and fortify the U.s.-mexico border.

The president said he had persuaded Egypt to allow 20 trucks of humanitari­an aid into Gaza, where the Health Ministry has said more than 3,000 people have died since Oct. 7.

“If Hamas confiscate­s them or doesn’t let it get through,” then the aid will be cut off, he said, adding that President Abdel-fattah el-sissi of Egypt “deserves a lot of credit.”

No American president has ever visited Israel during a war, and Biden came to its defense on Wednesday not just by offering his symbolical­ly potent presence but by backing its denial of responsibi­lity for the catastroph­ic explosion that struck a hospital in Gaza. The Health Ministry said hundreds of people were killed.

With the region convulsing with anger and protests after the blast, the president rejected Palestinia­n claims that the hospital was hit by an Israeli airstrike and instead endorsed the government’s insistence that it was an errant rocket fired by Islamic Jihad, an extremist group aligned with Hamas.

“Based on what I’ve seen, it appears as though it was done by the other team, not you,” Biden said unprompted as he sat in a Tel Aviv hotel next to Netanyahu.

“But there’s a lot of people out there not sure,” he said, referring to skepticism in the Arab world. “So we’ve got a lot, we’ve got to overcome a lot of things.”

U.S. officials later said they had multiple strands of intelligen­ce — including infrared satellite data — indicating that the deadly blast was caused by Palestinia­n armed groups.

The timing of the president’s audacious visit to a nation at war could hardly have been more precarious politicall­y. After an allnight flight from Washington, Biden arrived in a country traumatize­d by terrorism and girding for a protracted war against Hamas and put himself at the center of a volatile conflict as rockets and recriminat­ions volleyed back and forth with no end in sight. Air Force One landed at Ben-gurion Internatio­nal Airport, within range of Hamas rockets from Gaza and abandoned by many internatio­nal carriers fearful for their security.

As he would for the victims later in the day, Biden offered warm hugs to Netanyahu and President Isaac Herzog on the airport tarmac, but his subsequent meetings with the Israeli war Cabinet came as broken bodies were being pulled from the rubble of the hospital in Gaza City. It seemed unlikely that an American exoneratio­n of Israel for the hospital blast would convince many in the Arab world, where furious demonstrat­ions have broken out in capitals around the region.

Lebanese authoritie­s used tear gas and water cannons to disperse protesters near the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, and the Israeli-occupied West Bank was on high alert after protests erupted within hours of the blast. In Bahrain, protesters took to the streets in unusually large demonstrat­ions, chanting “death to Israel” and carrying images of Biden’s face labeled with the word “war criminal,” according to videos shared by Bahraini activists.

Nonetheles­s, Biden was determined to allow no daylight between him and Israel in public. “I want you to know you’re not alone,” the president said with the cameras on. “You’re not alone. As I emphasized earlier, we will continue to have Israel’s back.”

Still, the whisper in the ear was there for those who wanted to hear it. “The vast majority of Palestinia­ns are not Hamas,” Biden said in his remarks. “Hamas does not represent the Palestinia­n people.”

At least some appeared to hear. Even before Biden landed, newspaper Yediot Aharonot referred to the president’s embrace in a headline as a “bear hug” — a phrase that in Hebrew, the Jewish Insider newsletter noted, “refers to holding someone close in order to restrain him, not just to show love.”

The Israeli prime minister preferred his own definition, recounting for Biden the horrors of the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas, describing women being raped, soldiers being beheaded and children hunted down in hiding places in their homes. “Just imagine, Mr. President, the fear and the panic of those little children in their last moments as the monsters discovered and found out their hiding places,” Netanyahu said.

Biden heard some of those stories firsthand when he met with survivors and relatives. Several cried as they related their experience­s and thanked him effusively for coming.

Among them was Rachel Edri, a retired grandmothe­r who was held at gunpoint in her home for 20 hours and used food and conversati­on to keep her captors calm and stall them until she could be rescued. Her son, Evatar Edri, is a police officer who helped free his parents.

Another survivor was Amir Tibon, who huddled in the dark with his wife and two daughters for 10 hours as his kibbutz was attacked by Hamas gunmen until his father, Noam Tibon, a retired general, rushed to his rescue armed only with a handgun.

Rarely has an overseas presidenti­al expedition been so uncertain even in its itinerary at the time of takeoff, and so freighted with jeopardy both political and physical. By making such a high-profile personal visit as Israel exacts its retributio­n, Biden effectivel­y risked taking some ownership of Netanyahu’s actions.

The trip began unraveling even before Biden left Washington, as a planned second stop in Amman, Jordan, for a four-way summit meeting with Arab leaders was abruptly canceled by King Abdullah II after the hospital explosion. Aides said Biden would instead speak by telephone during his flight home with two of the Arab leaders he was supposed to meet in Amman: el-sissi and President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinia­n Authority.

 ?? Evan Vucci/associated Press ?? At top, Gov. Kathy Hochul tours a Leket Israel food pantry. She arrived in Israel Wednesday to begin a trip intended to show support for the country during its war with Hamas. STORY, A3.
Above, President Joe Biden is greeted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after arriving at Ben Gurion Internatio­nal Airport in Tel Aviv on Wednesday.
At left, Palestinia­ns carry belongings as they leave al-ahli hospital, which they were using as a shelter, in Gaza City.
Evan Vucci/associated Press At top, Gov. Kathy Hochul tours a Leket Israel food pantry. She arrived in Israel Wednesday to begin a trip intended to show support for the country during its war with Hamas. STORY, A3. Above, President Joe Biden is greeted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after arriving at Ben Gurion Internatio­nal Airport in Tel Aviv on Wednesday. At left, Palestinia­ns carry belongings as they leave al-ahli hospital, which they were using as a shelter, in Gaza City.
 ?? ?? Courtesy of the Office of the Governor
Courtesy of the Office of the Governor
 ?? Abed Khaled/associated Press ??
Abed Khaled/associated Press
 ?? Alexi J. Rosenfeld/getty Images ?? A billboard in Tel Aviv, Israel, displays photos of people kidnapped by Hamas militants, and the words ‘bring them back now.’ President Joe Biden met with Israeli leaders and families of hostages taken by Hamas during his visit to Israel Wednesday.
Alexi J. Rosenfeld/getty Images A billboard in Tel Aviv, Israel, displays photos of people kidnapped by Hamas militants, and the words ‘bring them back now.’ President Joe Biden met with Israeli leaders and families of hostages taken by Hamas during his visit to Israel Wednesday.

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