It would make an immense difference if Biden would condition continuing aid to Israel on a cease-fire, followed by steps toward a regional peace plan. The challenge, however, as every knowledgeable observer of the Mideast has pointed out, is that too many assumptions of what happens after a cease-fire are just not plausible. The Biden administration’s idea of a "reconstituted" Palestinian Authority administering Gaza is wishful. So is the premise that Hamas will somehow stand down. Yet the stars are in weird alignment for some
kind of grand bargain because the region’s most important Arab states, led by the Saudis, have decided that a settlement with Israel, which has to include a Palestinian state, is in their interest. What’s lacking is an Israeli government as negotiating partner. Israel’s actions in Gaza and the West Bank are appalling in their own right and could cost Biden the election. Netanyahu keeps giving Biden red lines. Settlers in the occupied West Bank continue to steal Palestinian homes and lands while Israeli police stand by. And if Netanyahu goes ahead with his threat to invade Rafah,
there will be more carnage. Biden needs to give a forceful speech saying that the United States continues to support Israel’s security but will not be associated with further Israel-sponsored carnage; that settler thefts of Palestinian land or further Israeli displacement and killing of civilians in Gaza will cause U.S. aid to cease. Biden needs to point out that Israel’s disastrous practices are making Israel’s security and survival less likely, not more. Such a speech would likely cause Netanyahu’s government to fall. The road to peace, or even to a less dangerous armed truce, is far from certain under any circumstances. But it stands a better chance with a successor Israeli government, not to mention a second Biden term.
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