USA TODAY US Edition

Crisis in Gaza tests US-Israel relations

Biden, Netanyahu have been at odds over years

- Deirdre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON – In public, President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu like to tout their decadeslon­g relationsh­ip as warm and friendly.

But it’s no geopolitic­al bromance. Although the two see eye-to-eye on the importance of the U.S.-Israel alliance, their rapport has been marked by awkward diplomatic slights and deep policy rifts.

Now it’s being tested anew as Biden tiptoes into the deadly Israel-Gaza conflict, some of the region’s worst violence in years, and tries to exert American leverage to restore calm in the region.

“They are almost the antithesis of one another politicall­y,” said Khalil Jahshan, a Palestinia­n American political analyst and executive director of Arab Center Washington DC.

How the Biden-Netanyahu dynamic affects the current crisis, one of the most serious foreign policy challenges before the still-new administra­tion, remains to be seen. Foreign policy experts say Israel cannot afford to ignore the

White House’s advice, even if Netanyahu bristles at U.S. interventi­on. But for now, Biden is not pressuring Israel to back off its military campaign against Hamas, despite pressure from progressiv­es in the United States.

Jahshan said the two men do not trust one another, despite years of informal get-togethers and intense diplomatic dealings. Others say that’s an overstatem­ent but agree their relationsh­ip has evolved from friendly to frosty over the years, particular­ly during the Obama administra­tion.

“There were moments of tensions, very serious tensions” during Barack Obama’s presidency, said Nimrod Novik, a onetime foreign policy adviser to former Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres and now a fellow with the Israel Policy Forum, an organizati­on that supports a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.

Biden and Netanyahu have known each other since the 1980s, their paths first crossing when Biden was a senator on the Foreign Relations Committee and Netanyahu was stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Washington and later at the United Nations.

Novik and others say that Biden’s relationsh­ip with Netanyahu changed as the Israeli leader moved further to the right and as the Obama administra­tion pursued a nuclear agreement with Iran, Israel’s biggest foe.

Biden and Netanyahu are both “wise enough to not let policy disagreeme­nts overshadow” their personal rapport, Novik said. But that was severely tested when Biden became vice president.

But nothing frayed U.S.-Israel relationsh­ips more than the 2015 nuclear deal forged by the Obama administra­tion in concert with other world powers. Netanyahu blasted the deal and assiduousl­y courted Republican­s in Congress who opposed it. He even accepted an invitation to address a joint session of Congress – an event Biden notably skipped.

Biden may have described the relationsh­ip best himself when he recalled signing a photograph for Netanyahu with this blunt note: “Bibi, I don’t agree with a damn thing you say but I love you.”

After the November election, Netanyahu was one of the first world leaders to phone Biden with a message of congratula­tions. “Joe, we’ve had a long & warm personal relationsh­ip for nearly 40 years, and I know you as a great friend of Israel,” the prime minister posted in a Nov. 8 tweet.

Netanyahu’s quick embrace of Biden was particular­ly noteworthy after the cozy relationsh­ip he developed with former President Donald Trump, which went far beyond political flattery and good chemistry. Trump upended many decades-old U.S. policies toward Israel, by moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, for example, and recognizin­g Israel’s sovereignt­y over the Golan Heights.

Trump also withdrew the U.S. from the Iran deal and launched a campaign to isolate Tehran economical­ly and politicall­y – an approach that Netanyahu applauded.

Biden has moved quickly to try to revive the Iran deal, and he has restored some U.S. aid to the Palestinia­ns that Trump nixed. Biden also signaled that he would not make the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict a major priority.

David Makovsky, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said both Biden and Netanyahu are being careful not to reignite the tensions of the Obama years.

He and others said that no matter how tense or amicable the Biden-Netanyahu relationsh­ip is, that will not be a major factor in how the U.S. navigates the current crisis.

During a phone call with Netanyahu on Wednesday, Biden’s message for the Israeli leader was firmly supportive.

“Israel has a right to defend itself when you have thousands of rockets flying into your territory,” the president said, recounting his conversati­on with Netanyahu.

Hamas, the militant Islamic group that controls Gaza, has fired hundreds of rockets into Israel in recent days. Israel has responded with a torrent of missile strikes. Seven people have been killed in Israel, including a soldier killed by an anti-tank missile and a 6-year-old child hit in a rocket attack. More than 80 Palestinia­ns have died, including 17 children and seven women, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, and another 480 Palestinia­ns have been wounded.

Biden and his advisers have demurred when asked if Israel’s military response has been disproport­ionate.

“There has not been a significan­t overreacti­on,” Biden told reporters on Thursday.

“I’m not sure the White House is spending a lot of energy looking for leverage right now,” said Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “There’s a certain willingnes­s to sit back for a few days while Israel responds to attacks on civilians and defends itself.”

If Biden does begin to pressure Netanyahu to curb its actions in Gaza, Novik said Netanyahu will not be able to ignore it, even if he wants to, because the U.S. plays such an outsized role in Israel’s security. And Biden will know just what to say to get Netanyahu’s attention.

“Israel has a right to defend itself when you have thousands of rockets flying into your territory.”

President Joe Biden, recounting his conversati­on with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

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