'He's had it': Biden's patience with Israel may be wearing thin as Rafah questions linger
WASHINGTON ? President Joe Biden is at a crossroads on America's military support for Israel in its war against Hamas that could have profound and lasting effects on his presidency and the relationship with the Mideast country.
Biden's decision to pause a shipment of arms to Israel, along with a State Department report that concluded U.S. weapons were likely used to conduct operations in the Gaza Strip in ways that did not adequately protect civilians, marked a turning point for the Democratic president.
For the first time since the war began, Biden last week put conditions on U.S.-supplied weaponry: no more high payload bombs or artillery shells until the Israeli government abandons a plan to invade the densely populated city of Rafah.
"I think he's had it in terms of his patience, of being defied, especially given the extraordinary goodwill he extended for months," said Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., a leading progressive on Capitol Hill and a Biden campaign surrogate.
Progressive frustration with Biden over the war, which has lasted more than seven months, has been at a fever pitch. Protests have engulfed college campuses. Young voters and Democratic lawmakers have warned Biden he faces a collapse in support at the ballot box. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders has said the war could be Biden's Vietnam.
U.S. military aid to Israel has been a significant source of the tension, and deep divisions have emerged in the Democratic Party over how Biden should proceed.
Although most congressional Democrats voted in April to beef up assistance to Israel, 88 members of his party raised "serious concerns" with Israel's conduct in Gaza in a letter to Biden earlier this month. They pressed his administration to consider withholding some arms transfers.
After the president did exactly that, a smaller group of Democrats sent a letter to the White House questioning the decision. The lawmakers told his national security adviser they were "deeply concerned" about the message Biden was sending to Hamas and other Iranian-backed proxy groups. They want the Biden administration to explain itself at a classified briefing.
Republicans have challenged Biden with a similar critique. House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul said in an interview with USA TODAY on Monday, just after he concluded a meeting with Israel's ambassador to the U.S., that Biden's actions had "caused one of the biggest rifts" the United States has ever had with Israel.
"Not only does it greatly damage our long-standing relationship with Israel, but even beyond Israel, it has far-reaching consequences," said McCaul, R-Texas. "That's what I'm particularly concerned about, is the message it sends to our allies and friends that we can't be trusted ? and to our enemies it only emboldens and empowers, for instance, Iran."
U.S. officials have said that the size of the population in Rafah, where more than 1 million people had been taking refuge, drove the decision to suspend and review certain types of offensive weapons while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu weighs a major ground invasion. Biden has said he stands by U.S. aid for Israel's defense.
Biden's advisers argue that the war is at a different stage than it was in the aftermath of Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel that killed 1,200 people.
"We believe that they have put (an) enormous amount of pressure on Hamas, and that there are better ways to go after what is left of Hamas in Rafah than a major ground operation," White House national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters last week.
According to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry, more than 35,000 Palestinians have died in Gaza since the beginning of the conflict. The militant group has not provided the details for more than 11,000 of the reported casualties, and the United States, which does not have personnel on the ground, has not been able to verify its numbers.
Biden seeks to regain leverage
For months, the Biden administration had said it would not intervene in Israel's military operations. It is up to Netanyahu to determine how to conduct the war against Hamas, top officials repeatedly said.
But with a pause on some offensive weapons as the U.S. waits to see how Netanyahu reacts, Biden effectively told the Israelis to accept his military advisers' advice on how to defeat Hamas or else they will lose access to bombs, artillery shells and other munitions.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said Biden's actions are a reminder that the United States always conditions foreign aid.
"He is reminding the prime minister of Israel that when he exacerbates a humanitarian catastrophe, that the United States will not be a passive passenger in whatever direction Benjamin Netanyahu wants to drive through Rafah," she told USA TODAY. "We have been clear (on) our position on both a two-state solution and the importance of access to humanitarian relief. Benjamin Netanyahu ignores the United States at his peril."
In response to the weapons pause, Netanyahu said in a speech last week that Israel would "stand alone" if it had to.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters Monday that U.S. officials continue to confer with their Israeli counterparts about alternatives.
"We are talking to Israel about how to connect their military operations to a clear, strategic endgame, about a wholistic integrated strategy to ensure the lasting defeat of Hamas and a better alternative future for Gaza and for the Palestinian people," he said.
Daniel Mouton, director for defense and political-military policy for the Middle East and North Africa at the National Security Council at the beginning of Biden's administration, said the president's recent moves amount to a change in tactics rather than a major shift in U.S. policy toward Israel.
"I think if the administration had wanted to signal a broad shift, it had the tools to have communicated that," said Mouton, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, a nonpartisan think tank.
The administration has tried to buy time for Israel's government during a period that has been tougher for the country's security across the region, he said. "And the administration has also I think clearly tried to buy sort of diplomatic and political top cover for the Israeli government. But I think we're seeing the limits of what the White House is willing to do, which is why I think this is playing out publicly."
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, in an appearance Sunday on "Meet the Press," demonstrated just how careful a line the administration is walking.
"President Biden brought together a coalition of countries that helped defend Israel. So, no one has done more than Joe Biden. At the same time, what we've seen over the last few months is a deep concern on our part about the possibility of a major military operation in Rafah, given the damage it would do to civilians," he said.
Blinken said the U.S. still has not seen a credible plan to get civilians out of harm's way or plans for what will happen when the war ends.
The State Department said in a report Friday that it has "serious" questions about the measures Israel takes to protect civilians. But without U.S. personnel on the ground, "it is difficult to assess or reach conclusive findings on individual incidents."
That assessment fell short for progressives who had praised Biden several days earlier for conditioning arms transfers.
Allison McManus, managing director for national security and international policy at the liberal Center for American Progress, said that for many on the left there's a "a sense of skepticism" about whether Biden intends to follow through on the weapons threat after the State Department declined to formally assign blame to Israel in its findings.
"We still don't have a firm commitment that sending weapons in that context is against our laws and policies, and we're not going to do it," she said.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Biden at a crossroads on Israel over military aid, civilian protection