Biden and Netanyahu hold their first conversation in weeks. Trump
recently called the Israeli leader
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[October 10, 2024]
By ZEKE MILLER, TIA GOLDENBERG and AAMER MADHANI
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday held their first call in seven weeks, a
conversation that comes as Israel expands its ground incursion into
Lebanon and considers how to respond to Iran’s recent ballistic missile
attack.
Vice President Kamala Harris also joined the 30-minute call, according
to the White House.
“It was direct, it was productive,” said White House press secretary
Karine Jean-Pierre, who added that the leaders discussed a long list of
issues on the call, including Israel's deliberations on how it will
respond to Iran.
Netanyahu's office, meantime, confirmed that the prime minister had
recently spoken with former President Donald Trump. The Republican, who
is in the midst of a close White House race against Harris, called
Netanyahu last week and “congratulated him on the intense and determined
operations that Israel carried out against Hezbollah,” according to
Netanyahu's office.
The Biden-Netanyahu conversation comes at a moment of Biden's growing
frustration with the prime minister and as the growing conflict in the
Middle East is adding a layer of complexity to the American election
next month.
Netanyahu has repeatedly looked past the Biden administration's calls
for cease-fires. They would at least temporarily pause the fighting in
Gaza, facilitate the release of some 100 hostages, who have been held by
Hamas since the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, and stem the growing
conflict between the Israel and Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.
The spreading conflict across the Mideast is looming over Harris in the
final weeks of the White House campaign.
Some Arab-American voters in closely contested Michigan, and elsewhere,
are threatening to withhold their support for the Democrat over their
dissatisfaction with the administration's handling of the war in Gaza.
Trump has increasingly criticized Harris and Biden for their foreign
policy decisions as he makes his case to American voters to return him
to the White House.
The Trump campaign said it should not be surprising that Netanyahu held
talks with the former president.
"World leaders want to speak and meet with President Trump because they
know he will soon be returning to the White House and will restore peace
around the globe,” Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in
a statement about that call, which a Trump ally, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.,
joined.
“As we know, it's one president at a time here,” Jean-Pierre when asked
about Trump's call with Netanyahu.
Following the call with Netanyahu, Biden and top aides joined a call
with American rabbis to belatedly mark the Jewish high holidays. They
underscored the administration fully supports Israel’s right to defend
itself against Iran and its proxies.
“We’re also committed to holding Iran fully accountable for that attack,
and we will continue to do so,” said Brett McGurk, the White House
coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa.
Biden told reporters last week that he did not know whether Netanyahu
was holding up a Mideast peace deal in order to influence the outcome of
the U.S. election.
“No administration has helped Israel more than I have. None. None. None.
And I think Bibi should remember that,” he said, referring to the
Israeli leader by his nickname. “And whether he’s trying to influence
the election, I don’t know, but I’m not counting on that.”
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This combination image shows, from left; President Joe Biden, on
March 12, 2020, in Wilmington, Del., and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu on Oct. 28, 2023, in Tel Aviv, Israel. (AP Photo,
File)
Israel has been discussing how to respond to the Iranian missile
barrage from Oct. 1, which the United States helped to fend off.
Biden last week said he would not support a retaliatory Israeli
strike on sites related to Tehran’s nuclear program.
Biden has urged Israel to consider alternatives to hitting Iran's
oil sector. Such a strike could affect the global oil market and
boost pump prices, developments that would not help Harris' efforts
to win over the shrinking number of undecided voters.
Netanyahu’s other choices range from a largely symbolic strike —
similar to how Israel responded after Iran launched missiles and
attack drones in April at Israel.
“Our attack will be lethal, precise and above all surprising,"
Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said during a speech to
Israeli troops on Wednesday. “They will not understand what happened
and how it happened.”
Since the leaders' last call on Aug. 21, Israel has carried out a
brazen sabotage and assassination campaign against Iran-backed
Hezbollah in Lebanon, where the militant group has continued to fire
missiles, rockets and drones at Israel.
Israel is now undertaking what it has described as limited ground
operations across its northern border with Lebanon to dig out
Hezbollah. Airstrikes killed the group’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah,
and decimated its leadership.
Last month, thousands of explosives hidden in pagers and
walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah detonated, killing dozens of people
and maiming thousands, including many civilians. Israel is widely
believed to be behind the attack
The U.S. has maintained a stepped-up troop presence in the region,
to defend Israel and American interests in the Middle East.
Washington has grown increasingly vocal with Israeli officials about
the need to be kept in the loop on their decision-making to ensure
the protection of U.S. forces.
Gallant had been scheduled to meet with Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin on Wednesday, but the Israelis postponed the visit, according
to Pentagon spokeswoman Sabrina Singh.
The Biden-Netanyahu call took place one day after disclosures from
journalist Bob Woodward's new book, “War” that Biden has privately
made his frustration and distrust of the Israeli leader known.
The president privately unleashed a profanity-laden tirade, calling
him a “son of a bitch” and a “bad f——— guy,” according to the book.
Biden said he felt, in Woodward’s accounting, that Netanyahu “had
been lying to him regularly,” with Netanyahu “continuing to say he
was going to kill every last member of Hamas.” Woodward wrote,
“Biden had told him that was impossible, threatening both privately
and publicly to withhold offensive U.S. weapons shipment.”
The White House declined to comment.
___
Goldenberg reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writers Jill
Colvin in New York and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.
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