- Laura Ingraham, with zero irony
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Few positions of public service seem particularly glamorous, but almost none of them have us saying, “Damn, glad I’m not that guy,” like the U.S. secretary of state on a trip centered around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
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Secretary of State Antony Blinken began his fraught trip to the region amid an alarming uptick in violence. Israel carried out its deadliest army raid in years last Thursday, killing at least nine Palestinians in the Jenin refugee camp, which was followed by an attack on a synagogue in Jerusalem by a Palestinian gunman, killing seven Israelis. Two Palestinians were also fatally shot in the West Bank in separate incidents on Sunday and Monday.
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Blinken criticized Israeli settlement activity in the occupied West Bank as an obstacle to peace, underscoring the Biden administration’s opposition to a central piece of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right government platform: strengthening and expanding the settlements. However, he also reiterated Washington’s “ironclad” commitment to Israel that has persevered through multiple administrations, while simultaneously calling for peace, and support for the elusive two-state solution.
- Blinken held a joint press conference with Netantyahu in Jerusalem yesterday, and almost everything he said echoed words of the secretaries of state who came before him. It seems that Blinken has been given the unenviable (and honestly questionable) task of trying to maintain the status quo, even as violence increases and peace seems to be receding further into the distance. Today, Blinken met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who blamed Israel for the increase in violence and criticized the “lack of international efforts to dismantle the occupation” of Palestinian territory.
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Wasn’t Jared Kushner supposed to have solved this whole thing already?
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The last few weeks have been some of the deadliest in the decades-long conflict between Israelis and Palestinians. The Biden administration has promised to anchor its foreign policy in human rights, while also maintaining a steadfast and unequivocal support for Israel. Many on both sides of the conflict feel that it is a low priority for President Biden, who has both a far-reaching domestic agenda and America’s role in the war in Ukraine to juggle.
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The question for the Biden administration is how they can pledge support for Israel and the two-state solution concurrently, because Netanyahu’s far-right government is dominated by a coalition that vehemently opposes Palestinian statehood. In other words, the United States cannot simultaneously want to protect the “status quo” and promote moving towards the two-state solution when the ruling ideology in Israel opposes both of those aims. Criticizing Israeli settlements as an obstacle to peace is all well and good, but President Biden has not restored the decades-old legal opinion that settlements are “illegitimate” which was rescinded under President Donald Trump.
Palestinians and Israelis do seem to agree on one thing: that the United States is both interfering too much and also not helping enough. Only about one-third of each population supports the two-state solution, an all-time low in the region. The Biden administration is trying to use an old playbook, but the playing field has changed. Netanyahu’s ultranationalist government was elected on a platform of increasing settlements and arming Israeli civilians, and now it’s trying to weaken the country’s Supreme Court, eroding a key component of democratic checks and balances. The United States needs to acknowledge the current reality of the conflict, and either carve out a more coherent stance, or get out of the way.
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Get ready for the ride of your life with the X-Ray Vision Podcast! Join Jason and Rosie as they explore the world of gaming and comics, while taking a deep dive into the new HBO series - The Last of Us. We promise their insights and exciting discussions will keep you on the edge of your seat. Plus, you can watch full podcast episodes right on the X-Ray Vision Youtube channel. Don't miss a beat!
Tune in every Wednesday and Friday for new episodes of X-Ray Vision on Youtube or wherever you get your podcasts!
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The House January 6 Committee concluded that the FBI and other federal security agencies could have prevented insurrectionists from breaching the Capitol had they acted on volumes of intelligence collected beforehand, an opinion the committee omitted from its televised hearings and final report. The committee’s chief investigative counsel Tim Heaphy, a former federal prosecutor, said that while he endorses the panel’s main findings, his inquiry documented the ways in which federal law enforcement failures contributed to the riot. He was exacting in his words, saying, “Law enforcement had a very direct role” in those failures which led to the violence, and that the advanced intel provided to them was copious and specific enough for them to have taken a different course of action. According to Heaphy, investigators found that particularly the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security (the two agencies charged with collecting intelligence about domestic terrorism) did not adequately sound the alarm. Why the House January 6 Committee chose to downplay this element in its hearings and reporting is unclear, but it’s unsettling to think that those vulnerabilities in our nation’s most sophisticated intelligence agencies will not receive rigorous, necessary scrutiny.
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The Kremlin abolished one of Russia’s oldest rights groups in a renewed push to extinguish dissent, as the country’s war in Ukraine approaches its one-year mark, with more than 100,000 casualties estimated on each side. Russian prosecutors also banned the work of Meduza, a popular news site made up of journalists in exile as an “undesirable organization” and threatens to prosecute anyone caught aiding or promoting it. The Kremlin has steadily dismantled Russia’s independent media since the war began, exiling independent journalists, and cutting off access to Facebook, the BBC, and other news sources. The European Union condemned the decision, calling it “yet another serious politically motivated attack on media freedom,” and also denounced government plans to terminate the leases of a Moscow museum dedicated to the history of Soviet abuses. Not great, folks!
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