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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, In Jerusalem

Opinion

Netanyahu throws a tantrum over US ceasefire vote abstention and plays into the hands of Hamas

The prime minister may have manufactured a crisis between Israel and the US

March 26, 2024 18:33
Gideon Sa'ar_GettyImages-1231755839
Former Likud minister and head of the New Hope party Gideon Sa'ar (Photo by GIL COHEN-MAGEN/AFP via Getty Images)
4 min read

As soon as the Biden administration informed Benjamin Netanyahu that it wouldn’t be vetoing Monday’s United Nations Security Council resolution, he had three options.

One would have been simply to ignore it. The Americans had ensured that it would be a non-binding resolution with no sanctions or other forms of enforcement. A diplomatic blow, but not a fatal one.

Another alternative would have been to embrace the resolution, which only specified a ceasefire during the month of Ramadan, which is over in two weeks anyway, and also called for the release of hostages. Netanyahu could have said that Israel is prepared for an immediate ceasefire — as it is, the war in Gaza is right now at its lowest level since it began — and will lay down its arms for two weeks in anticipation of the hostages’ release.

Instead, he chose the third option — to throw a tantrum and blame the Biden administration, which abstained on the resolution for changing its policy and harming Israel’s war effort and the hostages by not insisting that the ceasefire and the hostages’ release be implicitly connected in the resolution.