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Opinion

Biden’s weapons threat has made peace less, not more, likely

By publicly threatening Israel, the US president has emboldened Hamas and Israel’s other enemies

May 10, 2024 12:26
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President Joe Biden (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)
3 min read

Here’s how the BBC is reporting the row between the US president and Israel over a possible ground offensive in Rafah: “US President Joe Biden has backed Israeli's right to self-defence, but warned against escalation in Gaza. Speaking to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Friday, he underlined his support for Israel's right to defend itself against Palestinian militants. But he said he was "deeply concerned" about civilian losses.”

Those of you who follow the intricacies of US-Israeli relations may have spotted what I did there. That’s actually a report from 19 July 2014 and it was Barack Obama, not Joe Biden (the giveaway is that Biden didn’t speak to Netanyahu but to CNN when he announced he would withhold weapons if Israel went in to Rafah). But there’s a lesson from this.

Joe Biden is regularly described as one of the, if not the, most instinctively pro-Israel presidents ever. There’s a lot to that. It was only the other week, after all, when his administration helped assemble a coalition to repel Iran’s bombs. And his flight to Israel after the October 7 massacre was clearly heartfelt, as were his words in the immediate aftermath.

But Biden’s threat has not come out of the blue. Rather, it is the peak – at least for now – of the near-constant US criticism of Israel’s conduct of the war. More even than that, however, it is best viewed as part of a foreign policy continuum that started with Obama and continues today, with a four year interruption under Trump.

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Joe Biden