Texarkana Gazette

Blinken off to Mideast for Gaza truce, aid

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Antony Blinken took off for the Middle East on Monday to press the Israelis, Palestinia­ns and regional players to build on and strengthen last week’s Gaza cease-fire, start an immediate flow of humanitari­an aid to the Gaza Strip and lay the groundwork for an eventual resumption in longstalle­d peace talks.

President Joe Biden announced that he was dispatchin­g Blinken to the region for what will be his administra­tion’s highest-level, in-person talks on the crisis that erupted earlier this month. The White House said later that Biden had spoken to Egypt’s president, one of several leaders Blinken will meet on his trip, to underscore the importance of getting assistance to Gaza.

The State Department said Blinken will visit Israel, the West Bank, Jordan and Egypt on a trip that comes as the administra­tion has faced broad criticism for its initial response to the deadly violence.

In a statement, Biden said Blinken will work with regional partners to ensure “the coordinate­d internatio­nal effort to ensure immediate assistance reaches Gaza.”

Blinken’s discussion­s with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and Jordanian King Abdullah II will focus on shoring up the cease-fire, sending urgent aid to Gaza, ending intra-communal violence in Israeli cities and laying the preliminar­y groundwork for a return to peace talks, according to a senior State Department official.

The White House said Biden and Sissi had spoke on Monday about “the urgent need to deliver humanitari­an assistance to those in need in Gaza and to support rebuilding efforts in a manner that benefits the people there and not Hamas.”

While Blinken will meet with the leaders of Israel, the Palestinia­n Authority, Egypt and

Jordan, he will not see anyone from the militant Hamas movement that runs Gaza. Hamas is a U.S.-designated “foreign terrorist organizati­on,” and contacts between American officials and the group are banned. That means the U.S. must rely on third countries like Egypt and Qatar to pass messages to Hamas. Hamas and Abbas’ Fatah movement are also at odds, meaning that Palestinia­n leadership is split.

The State Department official, who was not authorized to discuss the trip by name and spoke to reporters on the condition of anonymity, said Blinken would be looking at how the U.S. can support Israel and the Palestinia­ns in rebuilding, address the underlying causes that led to this crisis and advance equal measures of freedom, security and prosperity for Israelis and

Palestinia­ns “in tangible ways.”

The official would not offer specifics as to what those “tangible ways” are, but already donor nations are being asked to look at potential new contributi­ons to reconstruc­t damage done to civilian infrastruc­ture in Gaza.

The Biden administra­tion had been taken to task for its early response to the violence, including from Democratic allies in Congress who were demanding it take a tougher line on Israel and its response to rocket attacks from Palestinia­n militant groups in Gaza.

The administra­tion has defended its response by saying it engaged in intense, but quiet, high-level diplomacy to support a cease-fire, which was ultimately arranged last week after Egyptian mediation.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Secretary of State Antony Blinken waves Monday as he departs at Andrews Air Force Base, Md. Blinken is going to the Middle East.
Associated Press ■ Secretary of State Antony Blinken waves Monday as he departs at Andrews Air Force Base, Md. Blinken is going to the Middle East.

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