WHITE HOUSE
‘No one
knows what he’s going to say’ – WH fears mount about Bibi’s DC visit
The Israeli
prime minister’s video this week, accusing the U.S. of withholding military
aid, has raised the stakes (and the concerns) about his July 24 speech.
By JONATHAN
LEMIRE and ALEXANDER WARD
06/22/2024
07:00 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/06/22/biden-netanyahu-congress-speech-concerns-00164515
The White
House has grown anxious about Benjamin Netanyahu’s upcoming address to a joint
session of Congress, believing the Israeli prime minister could use the forum
to criticize President Joe Biden for not supporting the retaliation against
Hamas in Gaza enough.
The speech
next month could create a diplomatically complicated and politically dicey
spectacle for a president running for reelection. Fears among West Wing aides
have grown in recent days as Netanyahu has made a series of public statements —
including one in a video address delivered in English — accusing the
administration of withholding more military aid than has been publicly
disclosed.
“[Netanyahu’s]
video this week was not helpful at all,” said one senior official, who was
granted anonymity to speak candidly about internal deliberations. “And he could
make it far worse up there in front of Congress.”
Another
senior official put it more bluntly: “No one knows what he’s going to say.”
Frictions
have deepened between Biden and Netanyahu since the start of the Israel-Hamas
war, with Biden aides increasingly believing that the Israeli leader is
prolonging the conflict to stay in power — and that he would prefer Donald
Trump return to the White House. And the war has created a thorny political
dilemma for Biden, who has been slammed by Republicans for insufficiently
supporting Israel yet at the same time also taken heat from some members of his
own party for not protecting Palestinian civilians.
But the
accusations lobbed by Netanyahu over the past few days have put the
relationship at a new nadir, taking the West Wing by surprise and leaving Biden
aides deeply frustrated, according to the officials. The Biden administration
postponed a high-level U.S.-Israel meeting on Iran after the release of
Netanyahu’s video.
“We
genuinely do not know what he’s talking about,” White House press secretary
Karine Jean-Pierre said this week. She, and other aides, insisted that only one
shipment was paused, with no other changes to weapons transfers.
As of this
week, the White House had yet to send an invitation for Netanyahu to meet with
Biden when he comes to Washington for his scheduled speech on July 24,
according to the first senior official and two others. Those officials stressed
that such an invitation will likely be offered — noting that it would be a
major slap in the face if the two leaders did not meet and that Biden was not
inclined to make such a public rebuke of his Israeli counterpart.
The White
House did not respond to a request for comment on the invitation.
But meetings
have been taking place at slightly lower levels. Israeli national security
adviser Tzachi Hanegbi and Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer met
Thursday at the White House with national security adviser Jake Sullivan and
Secretary of State Antony Blinken. The group discussed the war against Hamas,
the state of Gaza and Netanyahu’s forthcoming visit. The video — and the rancor
it caused in Washington — was briefly mentioned, two U.S. officials said.
Matthew
Miller, the State Department spokesperson, hinted at the message Blinken
delivered in the meeting.
“I don’t
think it’s productive to engage in an intense public back and forth about
this,” he told reporters Thursday, adding that Blinken in a meeting with
Netanyahu last week assured the prime minister “our commitment to Israel’s
security is sacrosanct.”
Inside the
West Wing, aides believe that Netanyahu will use the congressional speech to
address his audience at home as much as in the U.S., according to one of the
senior officials. The prime minister will likely express gratitude for the
United States’ help and stress the longstanding alliance between the two
nations. But aides also anticipate that Netanyahu will ask for more assistance
without any conditions — something they suspect will be icily received by
Democrats.
The big
unknown, the senior official admitted, is if Netanyahu will use the moment to
offer any specific criticisms of Biden or his response to Israel’s operations
in Gaza. The West Wing is keenly aware of Netanyahu’s precarious domestic
political situation, in which he is trying to placate the far-right members of
his coalition who want further escalation of the war against Hamas. For the
prime minister, being perceived at home as fighting Biden could be helpful.
Airing his
grievances about arms transfers with the Biden administration openly, Netanyahu
told Punchbowl News in an interview published Friday, “was absolutely necessary
after months of quiet conversation that did not solve the problem.”
“I’m not a
partisan, I’m not a Republican or a Democrat. I’m an Israeli patriot, and I
speak on behalf of the Israeli people,” he continued.
Netanyahu
has used speeches to Congress for his political purposes before, infuriating
the Obama-Biden White House when he addressed a joint session in 2015 to attack
that administration’s proposed Iran nuclear deal.
That 2015
speech was not received well by progressive Democrats, who have only grown more
critical of Netanyahu since the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war. Democrats
have chastised the Israeli PM for disregarding humanitarian concerns in Gaza
and empowering a far-right government in Israel.
“I didn’t
attend last time, for obvious reasons,” said Rep. Andre Carson (D-Ind.). “I
think that Americans are becoming more deeply concerned about what is being
done to taxpayer dollars as it relates to what’s happening in that region.”
Some
progressives, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), have indicated they
will skip the late July speech.
Shadowing
the address is the long-term status of U.S. aid to Israel. The White House
helped shepherd a massive weapons package through Congress and has consistently
signed off on additional arms shipments. But it withheld a shipment of 3,500
bombs believing they would cause unnecessary devastation if used on the densely
populated city of Rafah.
Around that
time, House Republicans invited Netanyahu to speak before Congress. Senate
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a strong Israel supporter but a vocal Netanyahu
critic, dropped initial reservations about the address and assented to the
invitation. “The White House was not surprised by the invitation,” said a
Schumer spokesperson.
A year ago,
Netanyahu sought a White House meeting with Biden in the midst of a backlash at
home to his proposal to overhaul Israel’s judicial system. The president, who
had spoken out against the changes, declined, and instead met with the Israeli
prime minister on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.
Not even
three weeks later, Hamas terrorists stormed over the Israeli border, propelling
the region into war and irrevocably changing the dynamic between the two
leaders.
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