OPINION
NICHOLAS
KRISTOF
Why
Netanyahu Doesn’t Take Biden Seriously
June 22,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/22/opinion/gaza-israel-biden-netanyahu.html
Nicholas
Kristof
By Nicholas
Kristof
Opinion
columnist, reporting from Tel Aviv.
A few months
ago, President Biden seemed so fed up as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of
Israel ignored his calls for restraint in Gaza that he finally sounded tough.
In March,
Biden was asked if his calls for Israel not to invade the southern Gaza city of
Rafah marked a “red line,” meaning that an invasion would lead to serious
consequences.
“It is a red
line,” Biden said, “but I’m never gonna leave Israel.”
What that
added up to wasn’t clear, perhaps not even to Biden. But as someone who
generally admires Biden’s foreign policy, I wanted to think that the president
meant that an Israeli invasion of Rafah would lead to a suspension of transfers
of offensive weapons, but no interruption of defensive weapons such as
protections against incoming missiles.
Then in
April, Biden called Netanyahu and seemed again to draw a line that was at least
pink. He urged an immediate cease-fire and, according to the White House
announcement, “made clear the need for Israel to announce and implement a
series of specific, concrete, and measurable steps to address civilian harm,
humanitarian suffering, and the safety of aid workers.”
The
statement continued, “U.S. policy with respect to Gaza will be determined by
our assessment of Israel’s immediate action on these steps.”
In May,
Biden once more seemed to establish a red line. “If they go into Rafah, I’m not
supplying the weapons” used against cities, he told CNN.
All this
seemed to signal Biden’s belated willingness to stand up to Netanyahu and avert
a humanitarian catastrophe in Rafah. After being widely urged to do more for
Gazans — even by his wife — Biden seemed to condition assistance so as to push
Israel to flood the territory with aid, avoid an invasion of Rafah, stop
killing aid workers and move toward a cease-fire.
In the
period since that stern April phone call, Biden has again allowed Netanyahu to
walk all over him.
Israel did
invade Rafah. The supply of food reaching people in southern Gaza dropped. At
least an additional 15 aid workers have been killed in Gaza. And Israel has
continued reckless bombings like the one that ignited a tent camp in Rafah,
killing dozens.
Now that
Biden’s red and pink lines have been ignored, what is the president planning
next? The administration is moving ahead with an $18 billion sale of F-15
fighter jets to Israel; I’ve no objection to the sale in principle, but the
timing sends an awful signal that there are no consequences for ignoring Biden.
“What Biden
has shown Netanyahu over and over is that he will wag his finger but he won’t
enforce the finger-wagging,” said Jeremy Konyndyk, a former administration
official who is the president of Refugees International.
This war
began when Israel suffered a horrendous terrorist attack, and it had every
right to strike Hamas — but not to level entire neighborhoods or to starve
civilians. Biden has enabled Netanyahu and protected him at the United Nations
even as a U.N. commission found Israel responsible for war crimes and crimes
against humanity.
Biden seems
to have believed initially that he could best influence and restrain Netanyahu
by holding him close. And in fairness, this approach worked to some degree:
Israel did not invade Lebanon last fall, as it was considering, and its
invasion of Rafah seemed more measured than its invasion of other Gaza cities.
It has also allowed more food into northern Gaza, aid workers say.
But the
bottom line is that Biden’s Gaza policy has helped Netanyahu stay in power
without, in my view, advancing Israel’s long-term security interests. The war
has made a mockery of Biden’s arguments that the United States backs the
“rules-based international order” and has thus undermined our position in
Ukraine.
Meanwhile,
in a remarkable show of ingratitude to a president who has been his lifeline,
Netanyahu used an English-language video to criticize the Biden administration
for being insufficiently supportive and is preparing to sidestep the White
House and speak to Congress.
We all know
that diplomacy involves sticks as well as carrots. If Netanyahu doesn’t take
Biden seriously, that’s because Biden mostly speaks softly and carries a big
carrot.
After the
latest Netanyahu attack on the Biden administration a few days ago, the White
House responded that it found the prime minister’s remarks “deeply
disappointing.” That sure taught Netanyahu a lesson.
“How much
more proof does Biden need that Netanyahu is not a U.S. ally?” asked Haaretz,
the Israeli newspaper. It advised Biden that Netanyahu “has taken you for a
ride.”
If Biden
shows that his red lines are meaningless in Gaza, why should Russia, China or
Iran find him credible? If he is too timid to take on an ally dependent on
American arms, what reason is there to think he would confront a rival?
The paradox
is that Biden has generally had a successful foreign policy, especially in
knitting together an alliance in Asia to reduce the risk of war with China. Yet
he now finds himself mired in a mess in the Middle East that could well worsen.
The war in Gaza may drag on at a lower level for the rest of this year, and
Israel is talking of attacking Hezbollah in Lebanon in the coming weeks,
triggering a separate war that could be even more catastrophic. Biden is trying
to prevent a Lebanon war, but the way he projects weakness to Netanyahu limits
his influence.
Look, I
recognize that it’s easy to write these critical columns from the sidelines and
that it’s much harder to actually navigate real-world policy. The realm of
diplomacy always has more problems than solutions, and American politics and
Netanyahu’s slipperiness make it all the more complicated. Yet after eight
months of unremitting horror in the Middle East, Biden should recognize that
his Gaza policy is a moral, practical and political failure that has not helped
anyone but Netanyahu.
Nicholas
Kristof became a columnist for The Times Opinion desk in 2001 and has won two
Pulitzer Prizes. His new memoir is “Chasing Hope: A Reporter's Life.”
@NickKristof
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