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Disagreement is not unexpected

Báo Quốc TếBáo Quốc Tế15/12/2023


The latest statements by the US President and the Israeli Prime Minister show differences in views on the current conflict in the Gaza Strip.
Các tòa nhà bị phá hủy bởi những cuộc không kích của Israel trong trại Jabalia dành cho người tị nạn Palestine ở thành phố Gaza, ngày 11/11. (Nguồn: Getty)
Buildings destroyed by Israeli airstrikes in the Jabalia camp for Palestinian refugees in Gaza City. (Source: Getty)

On December 12, speaking to Democratic Party donors in Washington, US President Joe Biden called the Israeli government "the most conservative government in the history of Israel", calling on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to change his approach.

The White House chief warned that support for the Jewish state’s military campaign was waning amid the devastation in the Gaza Strip. At the same time, President Joe Biden added that Israel “does not want a two-state solution.” According to him, the Jewish state still “has the support of most of the world,” but “everything is slowly eroding: because of the widespread “bombing.”

Speaking just hours before Joe Biden's announcement, Prime Minister Netanyahu acknowledged that he had differences of opinion with the US President on the post-conflict Gaza Strip. However, he "hopefully we will reach an agreement on this issue".

The comments are considered two of the most candid to date in addressing the persistent differences between Israel and the United States. Even before the conflict erupted after the Hamas attack on October 7, President Joe Biden was outspoken in his criticism of Netanyahu’s ruling coalition, which includes far-right parties. However, for much of the time since the conflict began, Biden has stood shoulder to shoulder with Netanyahu in public, despite growing public controversy over Israel’s campaign.

Meanwhile, in response to CNN (USA) last month, Prime Minister Netanyahu said he was thinking about “some form of Palestinian civil government”, even if it was something that was “reconstructed”. However, on December 12, he said: “I want to make my position clear: I will not allow Israel to repeat the mistake of Oslo” and declared: “Gaza will not belong to Hamas or Fatah”.

The “Oslo” mentioned by Netanyahu is the 1993 Oslo Accords, an agreement between Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabbin and Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, brokered and signed at Camp David (USA) under the mediation of then-host President Bill Clinton. The agreement helped form the Palestinian Authority (PA), which took partial control over the West Bank and Gaza.

Netanyahu’s statement also referred to Fatah, the largest political force in Palestine, which played a key role in promoting and signing the Oslo Accords and controlling the PA for the next three decades. However, the PA was “ousted” from Gaza by Hamas after the 2007 elections.

Thus, Israel does not want to hand over control of the Gaza Strip to Hamas or the Fatah-controlled PA. Meanwhile, Washington has declared its rejection of any proposal that includes Israeli control of Gaza and warned against narrowing the boundaries of Palestinian territory. At the same time, the US left open the possibility of building a Palestinian state, with the PA continuing to manage the Gaza Strip after the conflict ends.

Perhaps the current state of US-Israel relations is more or less reflected in Mr. Biden's speech at the White House reception on the occasion of the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah on December 11. Recalling his 51-year relationship with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the US President told about the words he wrote on an old photo of the two, calling the Israeli leader by the intimate nickname "Bibi".

“I wrote at the top of the photo: ‘Bibi, I love you very much, but I do not agree with anything you just said,’ and it is still the same today,” he said.



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