POLITICAL
MEMO
Trump’s Call for Israel to ‘Finish Up’ War Alarms
Some on the Right
Recent remarks he made urging an end to the Gaza
conflict, with no insistence on freeing Israeli hostages first, were another
departure from conservatives’ support for Benjamin Netanyahu.
In a recent interview with Israeli journalists, former
President Donald J. Trump said that Israel was losing public support for the
war in Gaza and that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should end the conflict
soon.
Jonathan
Swan
By Jonathan
Swan
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/01/us/politics/trump-israel-conservative.html
April 1,
2024
Updated
12:09 p.m. ET
Two Israeli
journalists traveled to Palm Beach, Fla., a little over a week ago, hoping to
elicit from Donald J. Trump a powerful expression of support for their
country’s war in Gaza.
Instead,
one of them wrote that what they heard from Mr. Trump at Mar-a-Lago “shocked us
to the core.”
“Both U.S.
presidential candidates, Biden and Trump, are turning their rhetorical backs on
Israel,” concluded Ariel Kahana, a right-wing settler who is the senior
diplomatic correspondent for Israel Hayom. The newspaper is owned by the
billionaire Republican donor Miriam Adelson; Ms. Adelson herself arranged the
interview with Mr. Trump, according to a person with direct knowledge of the
planning.
What had
Mr. Trump said that so alarmed Mr. Kahana?
He told the
interviewers that Israel was losing public support for its Gaza assault, that
the images of devastation were bad for Israel’s global image and that Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should end his war soon — statements that sounded
far more like something President Biden might say than the kind of cheerleading
Mr. Netanyahu has come to expect from Washington Republicans.
“You have
to finish up your war,” Mr. Trump said. “You have to get it done. We have to
get to peace. We can’t have this going on.”
That
statement apparently troubled Mr. Kahana even more than Mr. Biden’s warnings to
Israel. Mr. Biden has called for a six-week cease-fire in exchange for Hamas
releasing Israeli hostages. In the interview excerpts released by Israel Hayom,
Mr. Trump did not qualify his call for Israel to finish the war by insisting on
the release of hostages.
“Trump
effectively bypassed Biden from the left, when he expressed willingness to stop
this war and get back to being the great country you once were,” Mr. Kahana
wrote. “There’s no way to beautify, minimize or cover up that problematic
message.”
Trump aides
insisted this was a misinterpretation. A campaign spokeswoman, Karoline
Leavitt, said that Mr. Trump “fully supports Israel’s right to defend itself
and eliminate the terrorist threat,” but that Israel’s interests would be “best
served by completing this mission as quickly, decisively and humanely as
possible so that the region can return to peace and stability.”
But there
is no getting around the division between Mr. Trump and congressional
Republicans, who seem to be competing to see who can more ostentatiously
demonstrate support for Mr. Netanyahu’s government. They are flying to Israel
to meet with Mr. Netanyahu, planning to invite him to address Congress and
generally urging Israel to do whatever it takes, for as long as it takes, to
annihilate Hamas.
In
contrast, Mr. Trump’s hedging commentary to Israel Hayom is only the latest in
a long line of public statements he has made to undercut Mr. Netanyahu, whom he
has still not forgiven for congratulating Mr. Biden as the winner of the 2020
election.
In 2021,
Mr. Trump told the Axios journalist Barak Ravid that he had concluded that Mr.
Netanyahu “never wanted peace” with the Palestinians.
Mr. Trump’s
first reaction to the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack was to criticize Mr.
Netanyahu and Israeli intelligence services. Advisers privately pleaded with
him to clean up his comments and he quickly turned to standard lines of support
for Israel’s right to defend itself.
The
ambiguity of Mr. Trump’s rhetoric about the Israel-Hamas war has let different
audiences hear what they want in his public statements. He has said nothing of
substance about what he would do differently from Mr. Biden on Israel policy if
he were president, and his team again refused to get into specifics when
questioned by The New York Times.
Given that
void, right-wing supporters of Israel and Israelis like Mr. Kahana are parsing
every utterance from Mr. Trump, worried that in a second term he might not be
as reliable an ally as he was in his first term, when he gave Mr. Netanyahu
nearly everything he wanted, including moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem and
recognizing Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights.
“Those who
support Trump and also are deeply supportive of Israel’s efforts to win the war
with Hamas have to reconcile themselves with the fact that at a crucial moment
when the administration seems to be speaking out of both sides of its mouth,
and creating a sense of instability in the relationship between the United
States and Israel, Trump exacerbated that instability as the putative nominee
of the other party,” said John Podhoretz, the editor of Commentary magazine and
a former speechwriter for Ronald Reagan.
“The only
difference between Trump and Biden — and I say this as somebody who is not a
supporter of Biden — is that Biden has put his money where his mouth is. He’s
been sending arms,” Mr. Podhoretz added. “So that would seem to suggest that
operationally, the problem with Biden is rhetoric and not policy. And all Trump
is is rhetoric, and he’s not laying out any policy that should make anybody
feel good.”
Mr. Trump’s
former ambassador to Israel, David M. Friedman, insisted in an interview that
people were misreading Mr. Trump’s statements.
While he
said he respected Mr. Kahana, Mr. Friedman suggested the reporter had
over-interpreted Mr. Trump’s remarks: “I understand the fear of Republican
isolationism, because there is a vein within the Republican Party that moves in
that direction, but I didn’t hear him to say what he said. I heard him to say,
‘Finish the job’ — meaning defeat Hamas, defeat them decisively, defeat them as
quickly as possible. And then move on.”
Some of Mr.
Trump’s former advisers have filled the Trump policy vacuum with their own
ideas to resolve the conflict. His son-in-law Jared Kushner, who has pursued
foreign deals using relationships he built during the Trump administration,
said at a Harvard University forum in February that “Gaza’s waterfront property
could be very valuable” and that Palestinians should be “moved out” and
transported to an area in the Negev Desert in southern Israel that would be
bulldozed to accommodate them.
Mr.
Friedman has gone much further than Mr. Kushner, who seemed to be only musing.
Mr. Friedman has developed a proposal for Israel to claim full sovereignty over
the West Bank — definitively ending the possibility of a two-state solution.
West Bank Palestinians who have been living under Israeli military occupation
since 1967 would not be given Israeli citizenship under the plan, Mr. Friedman
confirmed in the interview.
It’s far
from clear whether Mr. Trump would support this, though he did tell the Israeli
interviewers that he planned to meet with Mr. Friedman to hear his ideas. Mr.
Friedman said he had not yet discussed his plan with Mr. Trump.
Unlike Mr.
Friedman, Mr. Trump has long clung to the possibility of a grand bargain
between Israel and the Palestinians, insisting that only he can broker the
“deal of the century.” Still, while in office, Mr. Trump acted so lopsidedly in
favor of Israel that a two-state solution that would be acceptable to the
Palestinians was never realistic.
John R.
Bolton, a former national security adviser to Mr. Trump, who has become a sharp
critic, said that Mr. Trump’s interview with Israel Hayom “proves the point
that I’ve tried to explain to people: that Trump’s support for Israel in the
first term is not guaranteed in the second term, because Trump’s positions are
made on the basis of what’s good for Donald Trump, not on some coherent theory
of national security.”
“What he
said in this most recent interview was ambiguous to a certain extent, but it
seemed to me to be verging on negative about Israel’s conduct of the war,” Mr.
Bolton said in an interview. “And I think there’s more there than meets the
eye.”
“What
matters to Trump more than anything else is how you look in the press. So
forget the justice of it,” he added. “It just looks bad.”
The way Mr.
Bolton sees it, when his former boss warns Mr. Netanyahu that his image is
failing, “he’s not worried about Israel’s image. He’s worried about his if he
has to defend it.”
Jonathan
Weisman contributed reporting.
Jonathan
Swan is a political reporter covering the 2024 presidential election and Donald
Trump’s campaign. More about Jonathan Swan
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