The Denver Post

U.S., Israel relations are at crossroads

- By Matthew Lee and Joseph Krauss

WASHINGTON» Their countries at crossroads, the new leaders of the United States and Israel have inherited a relationsh­ip that is at once imperiled by increasing­ly partisan domestic political considerat­ions and deeply bound in history and an engrained recognitio­n that they need each other.

How President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett manage that relationsh­ip will shape the prospects for peace and stability in the Middle East.

They are ushering in an era no longer defined by the powerful personalit­y of long-serving Prime Minister Benjamin Netayahu, who repeatedly defied the Obama administra­tion and then reaped the rewards of a warm relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump.

Bennett’s government says it wants to repair relations with the Democrats and restore bipartisan support in the U.S. for Israel. Biden, meanwhile, is pursuing a more balanced approach on the Palestinia­n conflict and Iran.

The relationsh­ip is critical to both countries. Israel has long regarded the United States as its closest ally and guarantor of its security and internatio­nal standing while the U.S. counts on Israel’s military and intelligen­ce prowess in a turbulent Middle East.

But both Biden and Bennett are also restrained by domestic politics.

Bennett leads an uncertain coalition of eight parties from across Israel’s political spectrum whose main point of convergenc­e was on removing Netanyahu from power after 12 years. Biden is struggling to bridge a divide in his party where near-uniform support for Israel has eroded and a progressiv­e wing wants the U.S. to do more to end Israel’s half-century occupation of lands the Palestinia­ns want for a future state.

Shortly after taking office, the new Israeli foreign minister, Yair Lapid, recognized the challenges Israel faces in Washington.

“We find ourselves with a Democratic White House, Senate and House and they are angry,” Lapid said upon taking the helm at Israel’s foreign ministry a week ago. “We need to change the way we work with them.”

A key test will be on Iran. Biden has sought to return to the Iran nuclear deal that President Barack Obama saw as a signature foreign policy achievemen­t. Trump withdrew from the pact to cheers from pro-israel U.S. lawmakers and Israel. Though Iran has not yet accepted Biden’s offer for direct negotiatio­ns, indirect discussion­s on the nuclear deal are now in a sixth round in Vienna.

The new Israeli government remains staunchly opposed to Biden’s efforts to resurrect the deal. But it maintains it will discuss the issue behind closed doors rather than staging public confrontat­ions, such as Netanyahu’s controvers­ial address slamming the agreement to the U.S. Congress in 2015.

In a conversati­on with Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Thursday, Lapid said the two agreed on a “no surprises” policy and to keep lines of communicat­ion open.

Eytan Gilboa, an expert on U.s.-israeli relations at Israel’s Bar-ilan University, says that rather than trying to scuttle any agreement with Iran, the new government will press the U.S. administra­tion to keep some sanctions on Iran in place and seek “strategic compensati­on” for Israel as part of any return to the deal.

Resolving difference­s over the Israeli-palestinia­n conflict will be another significan­t challenge for the two leaders.

Biden has already moved to reverse Netanyahub­acked Trump policies that alienated the Palestinia­ns and caused a near total rupture in official U.s.-palestinia­n contacts. Almost immediatel­y after taking office, Biden restored Trump-slashed U.S. assistance to the Palestinia­ns, which in just four months totals more than $300 million. He announced his administra­tion’s intent to reopen the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem, closed by Trump, that handled relations with the Palestinia­ns. Also, administra­tion officials have spoken of the imperative that Israelis and Palestinia­ns enjoy equal measures of security and prosperity.

Yet, neither Biden nor Blinken has signaled any move to alter Trump’s most significan­t pro-israel steps. Those include his abandonmen­t of long-standing U.S. policy that settlement­s are illegitima­te under internatio­nal law, his recognitio­n of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and his recognitio­n of Israeli sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights, territory seized from Syria in the 1967 Arabisrael­i war. The administra­tion also hopes to expand Arab-israeli normalizat­ion agreements that the Trump administra­tion forged in its final months in office.

In a call on Bennett’s first day in office, Biden affirmed his “steadfast support for the U.s.-israel relationsh­ip” and “unwavering commitment to Israel’s security.” He pledged to work together on all security matters, including Iran.

Biden’s support for Israel’s heavy airstrikes during last month’s war with Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers, who fired thousands of rockets at Israel, angered progressiv­e Democrats in Congress. With newfound strength in numbers, they are demanding that the administra­tion do more to support the Palestinia­ns and that conditions be placed on the massive amount of military aid the U.S. provides Israel.

While well-establishe­d Democratic lawmakers remain unstinting­ly supportive of Israel and its absolute right to defend itself, the growing number of progressiv­e voices in their caucus have turned the issue into a political hot potato. The change in Israel’s government is unlikely to ease their calls for action as Israelipal­estinian violence has continued in recent days.

Yet, the Biden administra­tion has already urged the new Israeli government to ease tensions with the Palestinia­ns. In two phone conversati­ons with Lapid over the last week, Blinken has spoken of “the need to improve Israeli-palestinia­n relations in practical ways” and pledged to deepen Arab-israeli ties.

It’s not clear that the new government will be responsive.

Centrist members such as Lapid and Defense Minister Benny Gantz clearly want to adopt a more cooperativ­e approach with the Biden administra­tion, while Bennett and his right-wing partners face pressure from their base to maintain Netanyahu’s hardline approach, not only on Iran but on the conflict with the Palestinia­ns.

The Israeli government already faces tough decisions, including whether to evacuate an unauthoriz­ed settlement outpost establishe­d last month and whether to intervene in the legal process through which settler organizati­ons are trying to evict dozens of Palestinia­n families from their homes in east Jerusalem.

The Biden administra­tion is pressing Israel to refrain from any unilateral steps — such as settlement expansion or evictions — that could hinder the eventual revival of the peace process, which has been moribund for more than a decade. But Washington has yet to issue public condemnati­ons of settlement activity beyond general calls for both sides to refrain from unilateral steps that could inflame tensions or harm prospects for an eventual peace deal.

Bennett is a strong supporter of the settlement­s and is opposed to Palestinia­n statehood, but he is also seen by many as a pragmatist. He may be able to turn his weakness into a strength, arguing that any major concession risks bringing down the government and returning Netanyahu to power.

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