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Biden Steps Up Pressure on Israel

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The fraying relationship between the U.S. and Israel over the latter country鈥檚 conduct of its war in Gaza got even worse on April 4, 2024, several days after in a drone strike. and warned him that the U.S. would put conditions on future support for Israel based on how Israel addresses concerns about civilian casualties and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Israel must permit more food and other supplies into Gaza, the president said, and .

The Conversation鈥檚 senior politics and democracy editor, Naomi Schalit, spoke with 海角换妻 about the extraordinary threat Biden made to Netanyahu, whose country is the since World War II.

What do you see happening here?

Biden鈥檚 threat to set conditions on support for Israel based on Israel鈥檚 behavior in Gaza is a very important step. Clearly the threat got through to Netanyahu, because he immediately took a series of steps designed to try to address the U.S. concerns, from committing to to , although there has been no word on progress toward a cease-fire. Netanyahu certainly doesn鈥檛 want to lose U.S. support.

At the same time, Netanyahu has a history of taking some superficial actions and making statements designed to placate the U.S. . Or in some cases, he has taken a step or made a statement and then taken another action that undermines that first step and exacerbates the U.S. concern.

The Biden administration is going to need to monitor in a very concrete and close-up way what Israel is actually doing with allowing aid into Gaza and how it uses military force in Gaza. There are going to be bumps in the road and continuing questions about what Israel is actually doing and whether it鈥檚 actually meeting U.S. concerns.

The听听between Biden and Netanyahu referred to 鈥渟pecific, concrete, and measurable steps鈥 that Biden wanted Israel to take. But there weren鈥檛 any specific details of those steps. Why?

Most likely, Biden was more specific than the publicly released summary was. But it would make a lot of sense for Biden to be conveying a threat at a relatively broad level and then Secretary of State Antony Blinken or other U.S. officials to be getting much more concrete and fine-grained in their conversations with the Israelis.

It鈥檚 not necessarily advantageous for the U.S. at the presidential level to lay out benchmarks that are so specific. That then boxes in the U.S. Events can evolve, and you want the president to have some leeway in what steps he鈥檚 going to take next.

But you need specificity in order for the threat to take hold and for the Israelis to realize, 鈥淲e really need to do X, Y and Z in order for the U.S. to be satisfied.鈥

It鈥檚 really politics to do it this way, isn鈥檛 it? By not giving the specifics to the public, Biden鈥檚 avoiding a situation where he can be humiliated by Netanyahu.

I think that鈥檚 right. It鈥檚 important for the president to maintain the ability to adjust the expectations and benchmarks a bit based on future events. If the president just says, 鈥淲e will stop aid to Israel if Israel does not allow X number of trucks into Gaza,鈥 well, maybe Gaza will need a different number of trucks two weeks from now than it does now.

So you want to set out the principle that the U.S. cares a great deal about aid getting into Gaza. If Israel doesn鈥檛 allow sufficient aid into Gaza, we are going to restrict our support and we are going to continue to monitor conditions on the ground.

What are the U.S. options for ensuring that Israel deals substantively with the humanitarian crisis and works in good faith toward ending the war?

is or can offer to Israel. It鈥檚 not the only thing that Israel cares about. But military aid is certainly very important. So one major way that the U.S. can condition support for Israel is by threatening to withhold military aid. And that has gradations, too. It can be restricting certain kinds of military aid that are likely to be used in Gaza and most likely to cause civilian harm there.

It can also mean delaying the delivery of aid as a further threat before you entirely cut it off. So there are different levers that can be pulled. But there鈥檚 also diplomatic support. For instance, the U.S. has often helped protect Israel at the U.N. Security Council by vetoing resolutions that are critical of Israel. Recently, the an important resolution. The U.S. can abstain or even support future resolutions that would put more international diplomatic pressure on Israel.

Public statements by the president are also important. So if Israel engages in further actions that the U.S. considers contrary to its goals, or harmful to civilian welfare in Gaza, the Biden administration or Biden can issue harsher public statements critical of Israel.

There鈥檚 even a forceful lever of imposing sanctions on certain Israelis, as the U.S. has done with in the West Bank. There鈥檚 the possibility that the U.S. could impose sanctions on other Israelis based on conduct such as human rights violations.

Is there a history of the U.S. making this kind of threat to other countries to withhold support?

Yes. Recently, the U.S. threatened to withhold military aid to Turkey , which seemed to induce Turkey to agree to Sweden joining NATO. A few years earlier, the U.S. was if it purchased some weapons systems from Russia. The U.S. said 鈥淣o, you鈥檙e a member of NATO, you need to rely on U.S. weapons systems.鈥 The U.S. threatened to at times in recent decades, based on the extent to which Pakistan was supporting U.S. counterterrorism goals in South Asia, Afghanistan and Pakistan with .

This is actually a very common story in the history of U.S. foreign policy. The U.S. has, and has had, many allies who are imperfect, just as the U.S. is. So this often raises this question of whether the U.S. should restrict support for them.

But none of these countries had the .

That鈥檚 true. So this has a higher profile. It makes it more difficult for a president to threaten to withhold support. And it also means it gets a lot of attention when it happens. The amount of attention given to this action by Biden greatly outweighs the amount of attention given to U.S. relations with Turkey or Pakistan.The Conversation

, Provost Associate Professor,

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