Marin Independent Journal

Biden allies press him to do more to ease suffering in Gaza

- By Farnoush Amiri and Ellen Knickmeyer

>> More of President Joe Biden's top Senate allies are demanding that the U.S. act directly to ease Palestinia­n civilian suffering in Gaza and are joining calls to cut military aid if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refuses to change course.

What had been dissent from independen­t Sen. Bernie Sanders and a small group of progressiv­e Democrats has swelled in response to the soaring death toll in Gaza. Now even Biden's closest confidant in Congress, Chris Coons, says it is time to get tougher with Netanyahu's government on how it conducts the war.

Israel continues to enjoy bipartisan support in Congress, and the prospect of military aid being reduced is uncertain despite the clout that these more mainstream Democrats wield. But tensions could be evident Thursday as Biden speaks to Congress about the conflict in his State of the Union address.

The war in Gaza isn't the only Mideast issue creating dissent within the party. Some Democrats are pursuing legislatio­n to compel the administra­tion to seek Congress' permission to continue military strikes against the Houthis in Yemen, setting up a possible showdown over the authority to wage war. The Houthis are attacking shipping in the Red Sea in what they say is a show of support for Palestinia­ns during the nearly five-month war in Gaza.

Still, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and the Democratic caucus as a whole have largely held off on taking action on the U.S. role in the Middle East conflicts. That's despite growing concern — and rising political opposition nationally, especially among Muslim and Arab American voters — over the Biden administra­tion's support for Israel's war in Gaza, and over Netanyahu's perceived shrugging off of U.S. demands to do more to spare Palestinia­n civilians and to allow in more aid.

Congressio­nal Democrats are reluctant to be seen as challengin­g the Democratic president's handling of the conflict, mindful that criticism could further weaken Biden in his uphill reelection campaign against former President Donald Trump.

The killings of more than 100 Palestinia­ns last week during a rare delivery of food helped spur more Biden allies in the Senate to speak out. Israel says its forces fired warning shots amid the chaos of the aid delivery. Witnesses and medical workers told The Associated Press many of the victims were shot when Israeli forces fired into crowds of hungry people.

In the last few days alone, Coons, a senator from Biden's home state of Delaware, called for the U.S. to cut military aid to Israel if Netanyahu goes ahead with a threatened offensive on the southern city of Rafah without significan­t provisions to protect the more than 1 million civilians sheltering there. Sen. Jack Reed, head of the Senate Armed Services Committee, appealed to Biden to deploy the U.S. Navy to get humanitari­an aid to Gaza. Biden ally Sen. Tim Kaine challenged the U.S. strikes on the Houthis as unlikely to stop the Red Sea attacks. And the most senior Democrat in the Senate called for Israel to “change course.”

“Israel needs to understand that the casualties they've inflicted on the people of Gaza — the devastatio­n they have caused — cannot continue,” Patty Murray of Washington, the senate pro tempore, said in a blistering speech on the chamber floor. “It is not in line with American interests, nor does it make Israel safer.”

Continuing U.S. military support for Israel at current levels “becomes untenable when Israel demonstrat­es they are unwilling to listen to us,” Coons told cable networks after the killings during the failed aid distributi­on.

The National Security Council pointed to Biden's own warnings about the looming Rafah offensive and support for a possible sea route to deliver aid. It did not answer questions about whether the administra­tion has altered its opposition to cutting military aid to Israel or to seeking Congress' permission for its strikes on the Houthis.

Lawmakers have sent at least a half-dozen letters to the administra­tion calling for changes in the conduct of the war since the start of the year. The administra­tion said this week it is actively exploring one possibilit­y, pushed by Reed, to open a sea route for humanitari­an aid. The U.S. began air drops to Gaza civilians last week, getting around Israeli restrictio­ns blocking much of the aid delivery by land.

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