Texarkana Gazette

Blinken, Lapid meet in Rome amid reset U.S.-Israel relations

- By Laurie Kellmaqn, Matthew Lee and Ellen Knickmeyer

ROME — Hush-hush diplomacy. In-person visits. Hush-hush diplomacy. In-person visits. And a very public no-surprises agreement on Iran.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid met in Rome on Sunday as their new government­s look to turn the page on former President Donald Trump and former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose close alliance aggravated partisan divisions within both countries.

Now, with Trump sidelined in Florida and Netanyahu leading the opposition, President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett are focused on pragmatic diplomacy rather than dramatic initiative­s that risk fomenting opposition at home or distractin­g from other priorities.

“In the past few years, mistakes were made,” Lapid told Blinken as they sat down for talks in a Rome hotel. “Israel’s bipartisan standing was hurt. We will fix those mistakes together.”

Lapid said he had spoken with Democrats and Republican­s since taking office and had “reminded them all that we share America’s most basic, basic values: freedom, democracy, free markets and constant search for peace.”

Blinken noted that even though the two government­s are new, “the foundation that we’re working on is one of an enduring partnershi­p, a relationsh­ip, friendship between the United States and Israel.”

The push means aiming for smaller achievemen­ts, such as shoring up the informal cease-fire that ended last month’s war with Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers and replenishi­ng Israel’s Iron Dome defense system. A major push to revive the long-dormant peace process between Israel and the Palestinia­ns could unsettle the delicate balance.

“Nobody thinks it’s a good idea to start charging through on a major new peace initiative,” said Ilan Goldenberg, a Mideast security expert at the nonprofit Center for a New American Security. “But there are things you can do quietly under the radar, on the ground, to improve the situation.”

That approach, managing the conflict rather than trying to solve it, may succeed in papering over domestic divisions. But it also maintains a status quo that the Palestinia­ns find increasing­ly oppressive and hopeless, and which has fueled countless cycles of unrest.

The Americans and Israelis will try to work out difference­s away from the public, as in Biden’s “quiet” diplomacy, when he privately urged Netanyahu to wind down the Israel-Hamas war ahead of a truce that took effect May 21.

“We believe the way to discuss those disagreeme­nts is through direct and profession­al conversati­on, not a press conference,” Lapid said.

Both government­s will try to preserve Israel’s fragile governing coalition, in part by reducing provocatio­ns that played a part in sparking the 11-day war that claimed at least 254 Palestinia­n lives and killed 13 people in Israel.

The new coalition in Israel shares little beyond the conviction that Netanyahu had to go. It’s composed of eight parties, each effectivel­y with veto power on decisions. So if even one party bolts, Israel’s government would be at serious risk of collapse, with Netanyahu waiting just offstage.

At least in the short term, Lapid, a centrist, will be Israel’s point man on repairs to the tattered relationsh­ip with Biden and the Democrats. The party controls both houses of Congress but is increasing­ly divided on the Mideast conflict, with progressiv­e members calling for the U.S. to exert more pressure on Israel.

“What they’re building now is mutual trust,” said Michael Oren, former Israeli ambassador to the United States under Netanyahu. “I expect a change of tone rather than of substance… but there’s a possibilit­y that it could produce something better for Israel.”

Topping the agenda in both countries are talks in Vienna over reviving Iran’s 2015 accord with world powers to limit Tehran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons. Trump, with Netanyahu’s backing, pulled the U.S. out of the deal in 2018 and imposed sanctions on the Islamic Republic. Biden promised to restore and expand the agreement.

Now, Israel’s new government seems intent on staying engaged and trying to influence the talks, rather than scuttle them.

“Israel has some serious reservatio­ns about the Iran nuclear deal that is being put together in Vienna,” Lapid said, before pledging that Israel would make its objections privately. Netanyahu had loudly and publicly opposed the deal when the Obama administra­tion was negotiatin­g it.

“We have the same objective,” Blinken said. “Sometimes we differ on the tactics, and we, I think, are very clear and direct to each other when that’s the case and that’s exactly how it’s supposed to be.”

Even the right-leaning Bennett, who is ideologica­lly aligned with the hawkish Netanyahu, has toned down the rhetoric on Iran.

“We will continue to consult with our friends, persuade, discuss, and share informatio­n and insights out of mutual respect,” Bennett said Thursday. “But at the end of the day, we will be responsibl­e for our own fate, nobody else.”

Tamping down tensions, or at least not inflaming them, is a key strategy, the officials said.

Blinken spoke of the need to resolve the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict but did not offer any kind of timetable or any strategy to “offer a more hopeful future for everyone: Palestinia­ns and Israelis alike with equal measures of opportunit­y and dignity.”

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