San Diego Union-Tribune

500 OFFICIALS SIGN LETTER PROTESTING POLICY ON ISRAEL

Signers represent some 40 agencies in U.S. government

- BY MARIA ABI-HABIB, MICHAEL CROWLEY & EDWARD WONG Abi-Habib, Crowley and Wong write for The New York Times.

More than 500 political appointees and staff members representi­ng some 40 government agencies sent a letter to President Joe Biden on Tuesday protesting his support of Israel in its war in the Gaza Strip.

The letter, part of growing internal dissent over the administra­tion’s support of the war, calls on the president to seek an immediate cease-fire in Gaza and to push Israel to allow humanitari­an aid into the territory. It is the latest of several protest letters from officials throughout the administra­tion, including three internal memos to Secretary of State Antony Blinken signed by dozens of State Department employees as well as an open letter signed by more than 1,000 employees of the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t.

The signatorie­s of the letter submitted Tuesday and the one circulatin­g among USAID employees are anonymous, the USAID letter explains, out of “concern for our personal safety and risk of potentiall­y losing our jobs.” The signatorie­s of the State Department dissent cables must disclose their names, but those cables have not been released publicly.

Although the Biden administra­tion has recently started voicing concern over the high numbers of Palestinia­n civilians killed while urging Israel to show restraint, that budding criticism does not appear to be placating many in the U.S. government.

The letter, a copy of which was reviewed by The New York Times, began by denouncing the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas, then urged Biden to stop the bloodshed caused by Israel’s retaliator­y military campaign in Gaza.

“We call on President Biden to urgently demand a cease-fire; and to call for deescalati­on of the current conflict by securing the immediate release of the Israeli hostages and arbitraril­y detained Palestinia­ns; the restoratio­n of water, fuel, electricit­y and other basic services; and the passage of adequate humanitari­an aid to the Gaza Strip,” the letter states.

Organizers continued to collect signatures even after the letter was delivered to Biden, and by Tuesday afternoon the letter had about 100 more names than the 402 with which it was formally submitted. The letter’s organizers said they intended to inform the White House daily of updated signature counts.

Two political appointees who helped organize the letter to Biden said the majority of the signatorie­s are political appointees of various faiths who work throughout government, from the National Security Council to the FBI and the Justice Department.

Some of the signatorie­s helped Biden get elected in 2020 and said in interviews they were concerned that the administra­tion’s support of Israel’s war in Gaza clashed with Democratic voters’ stance on the issue.

Biden and Blinken, like Israel’s leadership, say they oppose a cease-fire — a longterm halt in fighting, typically accompanie­d by political negotiatio­ns — on the grounds that it would spare Hamas and allow it to reconstitu­te for future attacks. They have instead called for “pauses,” short interrupti­ons in the fighting lasting perhaps a few hours, to allow for clearly defined humanitari­an missions such as aid delivery into Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

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