Marysville Appeal-Democrat

US spy chief becomes key envoy as Biden, Netanyahu ties fray

- By Iain Marlow, Peter Martin and Sam Dagher Bloomberg News

One key American official is quietly keeping Washington’s lines of communicat­ion open across the Middle East as the U.S. and Israel endure their worst falling-out in decades over the war in Gaza.

Central Intelligen­ce Agency Director William Burns, a veteran diplomat and Arabic speaker, was in Cairo alongside Qatari and Egyptian mediators this week as U.S. President Joe Biden set off a political firestorm by halting the shipment of about 3,500 bombs to Israel. The White House is increasing­ly concerned about massive civilian casualties if

Israel launches a ground offensive on Rafah, the southern Gaza city where 1.4 million Palestinia­ns are sheltering from the war.

Biden’s priority is winning a deal to release more of the hostages Hamas took in its deadly Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

And it’s fallen to the

U.S. intelligen­ce chief to balance Biden’s carrotsand-sticks approach as Washington struggles to keep the seven-monthold war from escalating further.

Burns is “a man of results and I think one of the best U.S. diplomats I have ever met,” said Amr Moussa, a former Egyptian foreign minister.

His involvemen­t, according to Moussa, is a recognitio­n by the

U.S. that “the rage” in the Middle East provoked by the Gaza war and Washington’s support for Israel has put the U.S.’S reputation and credibilit­y on the line, particular­ly with traditiona­l Arab allies such as Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. They believe the White House should have put more pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to end the conflict.

Burns “has assiduousl­y developed personal relationsh­ips with leaders across the region for decades,” said William Usher, a former senior Middle East analyst at the CIA. “We are at a critical stage. All sides have incentives to back out of a deal and in moments like this, public posturing can often backfire.”

Burns played an integral role in helping craft the week-long cease-fire late last year that led to the release of dozens of prisoners on both sides. For a moment earlier this week, it almost seemed as if Burns and his counterpar­ts had pulled it off again after Hamas, designated a terrorist group by the U.S. and European Union, said it had accepted a Qatari and Egyptian proposal to halt hostilitie­s.

But the talks quickly stalled again as it became clear Israel would not accept Hamas’s proposal for a truce effectivel­y to be permanent.

While Burns appears to be the most prominent

U.S. official on the Middle East file at the moment, given the importance of the ceasefire-for-hostages deal that might end the violence, he’s hardly the only official in what has at times seemed like a fullcourt press from the Biden administra­tion.

National Security

Adviser Jake Sullivan, White House Middle

East envoy Brett Mcgurk, Defense Secretary

Lloyd Austin, and the presidenti­al coordinato­r on global infrastruc­ture Amos Hochstein — who has experience negotiatin­g with Lebanon, where Iran-backed Hezbollah militants are based — have all made extended trips to and within the region.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who’s made seven marathon trips to the region, has helped persuade the Israelis to open border crossings for aid, coordinate humanitari­an pauses in the fighting and implement procedures to ensure aid workers don’t get killed in the crossfire, according to U.S. officials.

But Blinken’s extended tours in the region and public warnings have sometimes seemed to have little impact on the most right-wing government in Israeli history. The country’s air and ground assault on Gaza has killed more than 35,000 people in the Palestinia­n territory, according to the Hamasrun health ministry there. Hamas fighters killed

1,200 people and abducted 250 when they rampaged through southern Israel on Oct. 7, starting the war.

“Arab public opinion has no faith in Biden’s statements and sees Blinken’s shuttle diplomacy over nearly eight months as futile,” said Mohammed Tal, former editor-inchief of Al-dustour, one of the main newspapers in Jordan, where Burns served as ambassador between 1998 and 2001. Burns’s involvemen­t “has actually given some hope to people in the region — he does enjoy a certain level of credibilit­y.”

The CIA director’s role as an intelligen­ce chief allows him to keep a lower profile and deal directly with Israel’s external intelligen­ce agency Mossad.

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