No Alternative for Rafah Invasion, Netanyahu
Says, as Rift With U.S. Grows
A day after agreeing to President Biden’s request to
send officials to Washington to discuss Rafah, the Israeli leader said there
was no other option but to send forces into the crowded city.
By
Cassandra Vinograd and Thomas Fuller
March 19,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/19/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-rafah-offensive.html
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel on Tuesday brushed aside President
Biden’s opposition to a planned ground invasion of the southern Gaza city of
Rafah, saying that his government would press ahead despite pleas for restraint
from the United States and key allies.
Mr.
Netanyahu made the remarks to Israeli lawmakers a day after speaking by phone
with Mr. Biden, who reiterated his stance against an offensive into Rafah,
arguing that it could be disastrous for the people there and that Israel had
other ways of achieving its objective of defeating Hamas.
At the
president’s request, Mr. Netanyahu agreed to send a team of Israeli officials
to Washington to hear U.S. concerns and to discuss Rafah, but a day later he
insisted there was no alternative. Sending troops into the city is necessary,
Mr. Netanyahu said on Tuesday, to eliminate Hamas battalions in the city.
“I made it
as clear as possible to the president that we are determined to complete the
elimination of these battalions in Rafah, and there is no way to do this
without a ground incursion,” Mr. Netanyahu said.
The Israeli
leader acknowledged the dispute with the Biden administration and said that
Israel was engaged “in a dual campaign,” one military and one diplomatic.
“The
diplomatic fight gives us the time and the resources to reach the full results
of the war,” he said.
A spokesman
for the U.S. State Department, Vedant Patel, said of Mr. Netanyahu’s comments,
“we are just squarely in a different place and have a different viewpoint.” The
administration believes there are “alternative approaches that would target the
key elements of Hamas,” he said, and “would do so without a major ground
operation in Rafah.”
Increasingly
isolated abroad and unpopular at home, Mr. Netanyahu is trying to sustain
American support while also holding together a fractious governing coalition
with ultranationalist hard-liners who oppose any softening of Israel’s approach
to Gaza. Despite his resolute language on Tuesday, whether he shows any
flexibility may not be clear until U.S. and Israeli teams meet next week to
discuss Rafah.
Israel’s
military campaign has killed more than 31,000 people in the Gaza Strip,
according to the territory’s health officials, and the prospect of a military
incursion into Rafah, where more than a million civilians are sheltering, has
raised alarms about more civilians being caught in the crossfire.
Fleeing
from Israeli attacks has become a grim cycle for civilians in Gaza. Israeli
evacuation orders have prompted more than a million people to move from one
destination to another since October, each time packing belongings and seeking
transport — vehicle, cart or on foot — to escape airstrikes and ground fighting
between Israel and Hamas.
After
following evacuation orders, civilians have often found themselves at new
locations either engulfed in fighting, subject to airstrikes or without
adequate food, water, shelter, sanitation and other essentials. Jake Sullivan,
Mr. Biden’s national security adviser, said on Monday that Israel had not
presented any plan for ensuring that people fleeing an offensive into Rafah
would have anywhere safe to go.
“It would
lead to more civilian deaths, worsen the already dire humanitarian crisis,” Mr.
Sullivan told reporters, describing the argument the president made to Mr.
Netanyahu.
A group of
experts convened by the United Nations warned on Monday that food shortages
were so severe that famine was “imminent” and that the enclave was on the verge
of a “major acceleration of deaths and malnutrition.”
“The
situation of hunger, starvation and famine is a result of Israel’s extensive
restrictions on the entry and distribution of humanitarian aid and commercial
goods, displacement of most of the population, as well as the destruction of
crucial civilian infrastructure,” Mr. Türk said in a statement.
Israel has
pushed back on criticism that it is restricting aid from entering Gaza,
pointing to its support for several recent initiatives, including efforts to
provide supplies by air and sea that aid groups say are far less efficient than
road. Israel also accuses Hamas of diverting aid and of using Palestinian
civilians as human shields.
Amid
renewed calls by the United Nations for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza,
diplomatic talks have continued this week in Doha, Qatar. David Barnea, the
head of Israel’s foreign spy agency, Mossad, who serves as the country’s
delegation head to the cease-fire negotiations, left the talks in Doha on
Tuesday.
Israeli
news media reported that other members of Israel’s negotiating team remained
there, and a spokesman for Qatar’s foreign ministry, Majed al-Ansari, said on
Tuesday that Qatar remained “cautiously optimistic” as “technical teams”
continued to discuss details of a potential agreement.
Secretary
of State Antony J. Blinken is also returning to the region this week, his sixth
trip since the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attack on Israel. Speaking to reporters during
a stop in the Philippines on Tuesday, Mr. Blinken said his discussions would
include postwar plans for Gaza and the wider Middle East, including a potential
agreement that would normalize relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel and
lay the groundwork for the eventual creation of a Palestinian state.
He is
planning stops in Saudi Arabia and Egypt. There was no mention of a visit to
Israel.
The United
States has expressed increasing concern over civilian deaths in Gaza, but Mr.
Netanyahu insisted on Tuesday that he and Mr. Biden remained on the same page
about the main objectives of the war.
“We have a
debate with the Americans over the need to enter Rafah, not over the need to
eliminate Hamas, but the need to enter Rafah,” he told the lawmakers.
He said
that “out of respect for the president,” he had agreed to send a team to
Washington so that the U.S. officials could “present us with their ideas,
especially on the humanitarian side.”
The Biden
administration has repeatedly warned Israel against sending ground troops into
Rafah without a plan for getting the Palestinians there out of harm’s way,
providing them with basic services and allowing increased delivery of aid, much
of which enters through the Rafah border crossing with Egypt.
In northern
Gaza, fighting continued Tuesday around the territory’s largest hospital,
Al-Shifa. Israel’s military said its troops were “continuing precise
operations” in the sprawling complex. It said it had killed dozens of
militants, though its account of the fighting could not be independently
verified.
The Gazan
Health Ministry has condemned the raid as a “crime against health
institutions,” and humanitarian organizations have expressed alarm over the
situation at the complex. The hospital, along with the surrounding area, had
been sheltering 30,000 patients, medical workers and displaced civilians.
Israel has
said that the hospital complex doubled as a secret Hamas military command
center, calling it one of many examples of civilian facilities that Hamas uses
to shield its activities. Hospital administrators have denied the assertion.
The
director general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,
said in a social media post on Monday that the Israeli raid was “endangering
health workers, patients and civilians.”
“Hospitals
should never be battlegrounds,” he said.
Reporting
was contributed by Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Nick Cumming-Bruce, Aaron Boxerman and
Gabby Sobelman.
Thomas
Fuller, a Page One Correspondent for The Times, writes and rewrites stories for
the front page. More about Thomas Fuller
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