Become a Member
Opinion

The Middle East is paying for Biden’s delusional views

In 12 months of war, why hasn’t the administration tackled the threat from Hezbollah?

September 25, 2024 08:03
Biden in Israel
US President Joe Biden, during a visit to in Israel in 2023 (photo: Getty Images)
2 min read

Since October 7, the Biden-Harris administration has consistently failed to draw a distinction between random Hezbollah rocket fire across Lebanon’s internationally recognised border with Israel and Israel’s targeted responses.

This denial of cause and effect stems from the Democrats’ pro-Iran regional policy.

American appeals for “calm” from “both sides” and calls to avoid “escalation”, and especially “dangerous escalation”, are diplomatic denials of reality. These should not be confused with the diplomatic deferrals of reality pursued by successive Israeli governments in their Lebanon policy and by Benjamin Netanyahu after October 7.

Immediately after October 7, Yoav Gallant, still at the time of writing Israel’s defence minister, is said to have recommended striking Hezbollah first and only then turning to the smaller threat posed by Hamas in Gaza. This made military sense, but war is politics by other means. The Israeli public would not have tolerated it. Neither would the Americans.