Daily Camera (Boulder)

Netanyahu’s government is to blame for rift in Israel-u.s. alliance

Israel has pulled most of its troops from southern Gaza amid talks over the release of the more than 100 hostages held by Hamas since its Oct. 7 attack that killed about 1,200 people. It has also reopened previously closed entry points for food and water

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These are positive developmen­ts but, given the level of death and destructio­n in Gaza, there is little room for cheer.

In the wake of the Hamas attack, Israel had the support and sympathy of much of the world. But the unremittin­g fierceness of its actions in Gaza eroded that goodwill so swiftly and completely that even President Joe Biden has expressed increasing levels of dismay over the actions and attitudes of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.

Indiscrimi­nate bombing, Biden said in December, was costing Israel internatio­nal support.

Israel’s military response, he said after prepared remarks at a February news conference, were “over the top.”

Biden was particular­ly critical — appropriat­ely so — of the inability of humanitari­an relief workers to get food and water to Gaza’s 2.3 million people, many of whom face famine.

In March, the U.S. for the first time declined to veto a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for a cease-fire, and instead abstained.

The situation may have reached a turning point with Israel’s April 1 attack that killed seven aid workers in a World Central Kitchen convoy. They are among the more than 200 aid workers who have been killed in the war.

Speaking with Netanyahu last Thursday, Biden called for measurable steps to, as Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken recounted, “address civilian harm, humanitari­an suffering and the safety of aid workers.” The president told the Israeli leader that “U.S. policy with respect to Gaza will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these steps,” according to Blinken.

That stops short of demands by some members of Congress to condition continuing U.S. military aid to changes in Israel’s conduct of the war.

But it comes close.

The most positive developmen­t now would be for the lull in fighting to lead to hostage releases and a lasting ceasefire. If that’s not to be, though, it will be time for Biden to follow up on his warning to Netanyahu by finally requiring that Israel meet the same standards as other nations that receive U.S. military aid.

That includes transparen­cy and tracking to ensure that weapons are used “solely for internal security, for legitimate self-defense,” and that the recipient not commit gross violations of human rights.

Some of the values expressed by the most rightwing government in Israel’s history have caused some Americans to question the relationsh­ip. Netanyahu pushed a plan to diminish the judiciary’s ability to hold government power in check. And statements by the prime minister and other members of his government suggest a postwar plan to hold Gaza in perpetual subjection.

Meanwhile, Israel produces and exports weapons of its own, raising the question of why the U.S. needs to keep supplying arms.

It is Hamas that keeps the war going by continuing to hold the hostages it brutally kidnapped in its October attack.

But it is Israel’s retaliator­y actions in Gaza that may be leading the U.S. to reassess the two nations’ relationsh­ip.

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