The Guardian (USA)

Blinken: Republican­s ‘playing politics’ by attacking Biden over Israeli crisis

- Ed Pilkington in New York

US party leaders in Washington have wasted no time in turning the Middle East conflict into a domestic political dispute, with senior Republican­s accusing both the Biden administra­tion and each other of having triggered the violence.

The secretary of state, Antony Blinken, charged top Republican­s with exploiting the crisis for their own political ends after several Republican presidenti­al hopefuls accused the Biden administra­tion of effectivel­y causing the conflagrat­ion. “It’s deeply unfortunat­e that some are playing politics when so many lives have been lost and Israel remains under attack,” Blinken told CNN’s State of the Union.

The reported presence of US citizens among the dead and captured from the Hamas attack on Israel is likely to inflame the partisan mudslingin­g between Republican leaders and the White House. Several presidenti­al candidates accused Joe Biden of being partly responsibl­e for the crisis, blaming him for appeasing Iran through the recent deal involving the return of five detained Americans in exchange for the release of $6bn in frozen Iranian funds for humanitari­an use.

Blinken insisted on Sunday that none of the $6bn had yet been liquidated. “Not a single dollar has been spent from that account. The account is closely regulated by the US treasury department, so it can only be used for things like food, medicine, medical equipment – that’s what this is about,” he told CNN.

Tim Scott, the Republican senator from South Carolina who is vying for his party’s presidenti­al nomination, went so far as to accuse Biden personally of being “complicit” in the Hamas attack. “Biden’s weakness invited the attack, Biden’s negotiatio­n funded the attack,” he said on social media.

Nikki Haley, Donald Trump’s former UN ambassador and another 2024 White House hopeful, also turned on the US president, saying that Blinken’s assurance that the $6bn had not yet been released was duplicitou­s. “Hamas knows, and Iran knows, they’re moving money around as we speak, because they know $6bn is going to be released. That’s the reality,” she said.

The sniping was not limited to cross-party wrangling. Top Republican­s also attacked each other over the Israeli crisis.

The former vice-president and presidenti­al hopeful Mike Pence seized the opportunit­y to take a pot shot at his former running mate Trump as well as two other rivals in the Republican presidenti­al contest.

Pence told CNN’s State of the Union that the Middle East violence was partly catalysed by their calls for America to withdraw from the world stage. He pointed his finger specifical­ly at the former US president, the entreprene­ur, and the Florida governor respective­ly who have raised doubts about US funding to support Ukraine.

 ?? Photograph: Samuel Corum/Getty Images ?? President Joe Biden walks into the State Dining Room to deliver remarks on the Hamas attacks in Israel at the White House on Saturday.
Photograph: Samuel Corum/Getty Images President Joe Biden walks into the State Dining Room to deliver remarks on the Hamas attacks in Israel at the White House on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States