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In duelling remarks, Biden and Netanyahu spar over Gaza’s future

The US President and Israel’s PM have clashed over who should govern Gaza after the war in a remarkable public display of differences between the two leaders.

Speaking during a fundraiser in Washington, Joe Biden made his toughest remarks since the war began about Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.
Speaking during a fundraiser in Washington, Joe Biden made his toughest remarks since the war began about Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.
Dow Jones

President Biden and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu clashed Tuesday over who should govern Gaza after the war, in a remarkable public display of differences emerging between the two leaders over the conflict.

Speaking during a fundraiser in Washington, Biden made his toughest remarks since the war began about Netanyahu’s government. He suggested that its hard-line stance has prevented Netanyahu from accepting the Biden administration’s post-war plan to have the Palestinian Authority take over Gaza, and that it would also obstruct progress toward political, economic and security arrangements that could spawn a separate Palestinian state — an outcome the U.S. president sees as a long-term solution to the conflict.

“He’s a good friend, but I think he has to change … This government in Israel is making it very difficult for him to move,” Biden said, referring to Netanyahu. He called Israel’s government the most conservative in Israel’s history, adding that some in the government oppose a two-state solution. Biden said members of the Israeli government want retribution “against all Palestinians,” not just Hamas.

Biden also warned that Israel’s approach to the war could result in a loss of support around the world. “Israel’s security can rest on the United States, but right now it has more than the United States. It has the European Union, it has Europe, it has most of the world supporting it,” he said. “But they’re starting to lose that support by the indiscriminate bombing that takes place.”

Authorities in Hamas-run Gaza say more than 18,400 Palestinians have died in Gaza, two-thirds of them women and children. The figures don’t distinguish between militants and civilians.

Biden reiterated his own staunch support for Israel following the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas, which killed 1200 people, and stressed that Israel has a right to defend itself. Hundreds were taken hostage in the attack. “The safety of the Jewish people, the literal security of Israel as an independent Jewish state is literally at stake,” Biden said.

President Biden’s comments came as Netanyahu said in Israel he would block the Biden administration’s post-war plan to have the Palestinian Authority take over Gaza, the sharpest sign of Israeli pushback against the U.S. blueprint for administering the enclave after Israel’s invasion ends.

“After the great sacrifice of our civilians and our soldiers, I will not allow the entry into Gaza of those who educate for terrorism, support terrorism and finance terrorism,” Netanyahu said, referring to the Palestinian Authority, which currently oversees parts of the West Bank, in a statement Tuesday.

“I will not allow Israel to repeat the mistake of Oslo,” he added, referring to the 1993 agreement that established the Palestinian Authority and which Netanyahu has long criticised.

Authorities in Hamas-run Gaza say more than 18,400 Palestinians have died in Gaza, two-thirds of them women and children. The figures don’t distinguish between militants and civilians. Picture: Mohammed Abed/AFP
Authorities in Hamas-run Gaza say more than 18,400 Palestinians have died in Gaza, two-thirds of them women and children. The figures don’t distinguish between militants and civilians. Picture: Mohammed Abed/AFP

The comments underscored the sharpening split between the Israeli government and the White House over post-war plans and it raised questions about the viability of the U.S. goal of having the Palestinian Authority take over from Hamas, the U.S.-designated terror group that has ruled Gaza and that Israel has vowed to destroy.

The plan was already facing opposition from Arab governments and from Palestinian Authority officials themselves, who say they want Israel to halt its offensive in Gaza and withdraw its troops before they will agree to serious talks about post-war planning.

Israel’s position on who will replace Hamas in post-war Gaza may not become fully clear until elections that are expected to be held next year, when it will be decided whether Netanyahu survives as prime minister.

His rejection Tuesday of a Palestinian Authority role in Gaza was intended to help shore up his flagging domestic support, amid calls for his resignation for failing to prevent Hamas’s attack and the government’s early fumbles in handling the crisis, Israeli analysts said.

It is a message designed to resonate with Netanyahu’s right-wing and centrist voters, said Michael Oren, who served as Israel’s U.S. ambassador under Netanyahu from 2009 to 2013. The prime minister is “saying Oslo was a worse catastrophe for Israel than Oct. 7 and I am the best guarantor you have that [such an agreement] won’t happen again.”

He “is playing politics with our national security,” Oren added, noting it was the U.S. veto last week of a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for a ceasefire that was blocked only because of “an American veto.”

Ehud Yaari, a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Netanyahu’s opposition to Palestinian Authority rule in Gaza is related to his own domestic political survival, but it isn’t a position necessarily shared by his entire cabinet, which sees little to be gained from defying the White House.

Women walk past a destroyed building in the aftermath of Israeli bombing in Rafah in October 28. Picture: AFP
Women walk past a destroyed building in the aftermath of Israeli bombing in Rafah in October 28. Picture: AFP

“At the moment, Bibi is just playing to the gallery, and the gallery is his political base,” said Yaari, using Netanyahu’s nickname. “I don’t think we’re at a point where Bibi feels he is obliged to make a decision.” Biden administration officials are pressing the Palestinian Authority to undertake major reforms, purging its ageing leadership, setting a timetable for elections and overhauling its security forces — steps they say are needed to build its political support and its ability to govern a place devastated in the fighting.

“There is no other game in town right now in terms of an organised, institutionalised Palestinian political entity,” Biden’s deputy national security adviser Jonathan Finer said Thursday in remarks at the Aspen Security Forum, a Washington policy event. “What is the alternative?”

Netanyahu’s resistance to a Palestinian Authority post-war role in Gaza only applied to it “as currently constituted,” Finer said, implying Israel would be more flexible if Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas carries out reforms. U.S. officials have met with Abbas, and other officials, to urge such steps in recent weeks.

But Netanyahu has warned that Israel won’t be safe from attack until Gaza is demilitarised, which he says the Palestinian Authority will never agree to carry out.

The role of the Palestinian Authority isn’t the only area where Israel’s right-wing government and the Biden administration are at odds.

Netanyahu’s government is considering creating milewide buffer zones inside Gaza that will be mostly off limits to Palestinians, an idea the Biden administration opposes because it could shrink the enclave’s territory. And a senior Israeli official said Sunday that forces could remain inside Gaza for an indefinite period, despite Biden administration warnings against reoccupying the strip.

Netanyahu acknowledged the disagreements between Israel and the U.S., saying he hoped the U.S. and Israel could reach consensus on a plan for post-war Gaza, just as they are in agreement on Israel’s goal of ousting Hamas.

US President Joe Biden with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv in October. Picture: AFP
US President Joe Biden with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv in October. Picture: AFP

The still-developing plans for Gaza under discussion between the U.S. and Arab governments envision an interim government running the enclave for an undefined period, drawing on the remnants of the Hamas-led ministries that delivered services before the invasion, Arab officials said. A massive aid infusion would be needed from United Nations agencies and donor countries to stabilise and rebuild the devastated enclave, according to Arab officials.

Only then would a revamped Palestinian Authority take over full control, officials said.

The U.S.-Israeli split over post-war planning is complicating preparations to supply Gaza with desperately needed food, shelter and security once Israel’s offensive ends, perhaps early next year, U.S. and Arab officials said. Unless the U.S. and Israel can narrow the differences, ending heavy combat in Gaza could leave a dangerous power vacuum in Gaza and slow the international response.

Along with talks with Israeli officials on what has become known as the “day after” in Gaza, the Biden administration has been privately pushing Arab governments and others to consider providing aid and security to prevent a bloody quagmire, U.S. officials said.

The U.S.-led effort has taken on new urgency as fighting has expanded to the south, deepening the humanitarian crisis facing its 2.2 million residents, the officials said. The U.S. has told Israel this month that it wants the war wrapped up in weeks, not months, bringing the post-war period into clearer focus.

“Now is the time to begin having conversations about postconflict governance,” said a Biden administration official familiar with the talks. “We all have an interest in seeing a revitalised Palestinian Authority take over in Gaza — we can’t have Hamas in power and we can’t leave a vacuum — and steps must begin now to ensure that can happen.”

In the war’s next phase, Israel is likely to pull its forces back to the periphery of Gaza and shift to smaller-scale raids, analysts said. It would likely still be seeking to free its remaining hostages and target surviving leaders in Hamas, the U.S.-designated terrorist group whose surprise Oct. 7 attack in southern Israel killed 1200 people and sparked the Gaza invasion, analysts said.

For their part, Palestinian Authority officials say they are willing to resume responsibility for Gaza but there is resistance to reforms suggested by the U.S. and a reluctance to consider any steps before Israel withdraws. “We are not going to go to Gaza on an Israeli military tank,” Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said in an interview.

Summer Said, Andrew Restuccia, Omar Abdel-Baqui contributed to this article.

The Wall Street Journal

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/in-duelling-remarks-biden-and-netanyahu-spar-over-gazas-future/news-story/58dabea82d90c7142f53cd26d15b1981