The Guardian (USA)

White House seeks to restrain Israel in Gaza amid growing internal dissent

- Julian Borger in Washington

The Biden administra­tion is increasing­ly seeking ways to restrain the Israeli military in an effort to slow the civilian toll and limit the risk of a wider conflict, while it faces a rising level of internal dissent over its Middle East policy.

In a letter presented to Biden and his cabinet on Tuesday, more than 500 political appointees and staff members from about 40 agencies across the administra­tion criticised the extent of the president’s support for Israel in its war in Gaza.

The letter denounced the Hamas killing of 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians, on 7 October, but called on Biden to rein in Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, in which the death toll is now above 11,000, according to the Hamasrun health ministry.

“We call on President Biden to urgently demand a cease-fire; and to call for de-escalation 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 said, according to New York Times.

The letter, whose signatorie­s are anonymous, reflects mounting unease among US officials about Biden’s policy in the first weeks of the war of emphasisin­g Israel’s right to defend itself in public, while trying to restrain its retaliatio­n in private. The critics have argued that this approach has not been effective.

“It’s been an open secret for weeks that significan­t dissent and frustratio­n has permeated across the US government – driven by heightenin­g concern around the scale of Israel’s military response in Gaza,” Charles Lister, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute. “The trigger for much of the internal dissent was Biden’s public comments – initially his zero-sum approach to the issue and then his misinforme­d scepticism of casualty figures in Gaza.”

More than 1,000 staffers at the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (Usaid) signed an open letter calling on the administra­tion to make better use of its leverage to limit the civilian death toll, and scores of state department staff have argued for a change in policy through the state department’s formal dissent channel, reportedly on three occasions.

The secretary of state, Antony Blinken, takes the dissent seriously, his officials say. Discussion­s have been encouraged at foreign missions around the world soliciting feedback.

“We’re listening: What you share is informing our policy and our messages,” Blinken said in a message to staff, in which he acknowledg­ed: “I know that for many of you, the suffering caused by this crisis is taking a profound personal toll.”

US officials say the administra­tion’s call for restraint, and emphasis on the need to limit the civilian death toll, has been conveyed repeatedly to Israel, and the Pentagon has been giving the Israel Defense Forces advice on how to target Hamas in Gaza while minimising “collateral damage”.

The officials say that there was support within the Israeli government after 7 October for a pre-emptive attack on Hezbollah in Lebanon, to blunt the threat of a second front, before launching a ground offensive into Gaza. The fact there was no such pre-emptive strike, they say, was due in part to US persuasion, thus fending off the risk, for now, of a wider regional conflict. Hezbollah itself, US officials believe, has no interest in escalating the conflict, and is firing just enough rockets across Israel’s northern border to maintain its credibilit­y as a symbol of resistance against Israel.

US officials have meanwhile stiffened the tone of their remarks on

Gaza. Biden said on Monday that hospitals there “must be protected”.

“My hope and expectatio­n is that there will be less intrusive action relative to hospitals,” Biden told reporters.

“We continue to have discussion­s at all levels, including President Biden with Prime Minister Netanyahu, to urge Israel to continue taking every possible measure to protect civilians,” the national security adviser, Jake Sullivan said on the same day. Sullivan said the US was also focused on negotiatio­ns to free hostages being held by Hamas, as many as 10 of whom are thought to be Americans who have yet to be accounted for. On Monday he met some of the hostages’ family members.

The Usaid administra­tor, Samantha Power, stiffened the rhetoric further on Tuesday, saying: “Israel’s restoratio­n of communicat­ions, electricit­y, water lines, and fuel to Gaza is imperative.

“And even as Israel defends its people, it is imperative that the IDF adhere to internatio­nal humanitari­an law,” Power told a meeting of an advisory board created to fund Israeli-Palestinia­n partnershi­ps.

US officials pointed out that the tougher tone was in response to events on the ground, as well as US internal dissent. Senior diplomats argue that the high level of vocal dissent is in part a generation­al phenomenon, and that the current crop of young foreign service officers feels more entitled to have a say over policy than their predecesso­rs.

They also point out that such levels of dissent are not unpreceden­ted. The state department was in constant turmoil during the Trump administra­tion, especially over its early efforts to establish a “Muslim ban” on immi

 ?? ?? Joe Biden met with Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, Israel, on 18 October. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
Joe Biden met with Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, Israel, on 18 October. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States