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Opinion

What the Hamas war in Israel has meant for America

With a presidential election looming, the crisis in Israel has highlighted Joe Biden's policy reversal in the Middle East and exposed the many fault lines in democrat and republican attitudes towards the region

October 19, 2023 09:48
Joe Biden and Benjamin Netanyahu at meeting in Tel Aviv credit Getty (7)
Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) greets US President Joe Biden upon his arrival at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport on October 18, 2023, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas. Biden landed in Israel on October 18, on a solidarity visit following Hamas attacks that have led to major Israeli reprisals. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

The “October surprise” is the unforeseen event that upends an American presidential campaign in the weeks before the November elections. This time, the October surprise arrived a year early.

Hamas’s barbaric attack on Israeli civilians and the possibility of regional war sent Joe Biden, who planned to pursue his domestic agenda westwards to Colorado this week, eastwards to Israel.

This war has done more than upend Biden’s diary. The Democrats’ decade-long effort to court Iran has ended in disaster and a complete policy reversal.

I can’t think of a historical precedent for an American administration, or indeed any world power, flipping as quickly as the Biden administration has. In the space of days, the Biden team went from sending billions of dollars to Iran to sending out the fleet.

The surprises keep coming, and not just across Israel’s borders. Biden promised to make Mohammed bin Salman’s Saudi Arabia a “pariah”. He treated Benjamin Netanyahu like one too, by denying him a public meeting for more than two and a half years.

Antony Blinken, the hapless secretary of state, is now begging MbS and America’s other Arab allies to help free the Israeli hostages in Gaza. And Biden could not refuse Netanyahu’s invitation to come to Israel in a show of support. The 2024 election campaigns are already afoot.

Donald Trump leads the Republican field by a massive margin and, court appearances notwithstanding, is already jetting around the country to rallies. Biden has to do the same, not least to prove to his own party that he has another four years in the tank.

Israel is one of the few foreign policy issues to “cut through” into domestic politics. A majority of the American public consistently supports Israel.

Congress is almost unanimously in favour of backing Israel, including by sending advanced munitions. As we saw in the shameful celebrations of mass murder on campus and the shameful evasions of the pro-Islamist Congressional “Squad”, only the Democrats’ left prefers the Palestinians.