WASHINGTON, US
US President Joe Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Monday that a major ground offensive in Gaza’s Rafah would be a “mistake,” as the two leaders spoke for the first time in a month amid growing tensions.
Netanyahu had also agreed to
Biden’s request to send a delegation of senior Israeli officials to Washington
to discuss Israel’s Rafah plans and a possible “alternative approach,” the
White House said.
But in a sign of the
increasingly difficult relationship, Netanyahu said that he had insisted to
Biden on achieving all of Israel’s war aims against Hamas.
The pair last spoke on
February 15, and Biden has been increasingly vocal in his criticisms of the
Palestinian death toll and dire humanitarian situation in Gaza where the UN has
warned of famine.
Biden was caught on a hot mic
moment recently saying that he would have a “come to Jesus meeting” with the
Israeli premier as his frustration grew with Netanyahu.
“The president explained why
he is so deeply concerned about the prospect of Israel conducting major
military operations in Rafah,” US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told
a briefing Monday.
“A major ground operation
there would be a mistake, it would lead to more innocent civilian deaths,
worsen the already dire humanitarian crisis, deepen the anarchy in Gaza, and
further isolate Israel internationally,” said Sullivan.
Biden had asked Netanyahu to
send a senior team of military, intelligence and aid officials to Washington to
“hear US concerns” about the current Rafah plan — and discuss an “alternative
approach” involving targeted raids on Hamas.
Netanyahu agreed to “have this
discussion and this engagement,” Sullivan said.
Sullivan described the call as
“businesslike.” Explaining why the two leaders had not spoken for 32 days,
Sullivan said Biden reserves his calls for Netanyahu for “when he believes
there is a key strategic moment.”
Biden has stood by Israel
since the October 7 attacks, visiting the country shortly afterwards, and the
United States has continued to supply its key ally with billions of dollars in
aid.
But Biden has been
increasingly vocal in his criticisms of the Palestinian death toll and dire
humanitarian situation in Gaza. Democrats fear growing opposition at home could
hurt his chances in November’s presidential election.
Netanyahu said in a statement
after the call that he had reiterated “Israel’s commitment to achieving all of
the war’s objectives.”
The Israeli premier cited the
objectives as eliminating Hamas, release of all the hostages and “ensuring that
Gaza will never present a threat to Israel.”
He also pointed to the
provision of “essential humanitarian aid that helps achieve these aims.”
Israel began relentless
bombardment in Gaza, alongside a ground offensive, after Palestinian militant
group Hamas’s unprecedented October 7 attack, which left about 1,160 dead in
Israel, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.
The militants also seized
hostages, around 130 of whom Israel believes remain in Gaza, including 33
presumed dead.
Nearly 32,000 people have been killed in Gaza since the war began, most of them
women and children, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run
territory.
As tensions with Netanyahu
escalated, Biden pointedly praised a “good speech” last week by Democratic
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer calling for new elections in Israel.
With the UN warning of
imminent famine in Gaza, Biden earlier this month ordered the US military to
start airdrops of food into the enclave, and is sending American forces to
build a temporary port for maritime aid.
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