Biden's regional disaster
Tragically, Biden did not build on the success of the Trump administration in the Middle East – the success demonstrated by the Abraham Accords, by which Israel and four Arab states agreed to establish full diplomatic relations.
By
Jason Shvili
Israel Hayom
July 6, 2023

The Biden administration's Middle East policy is an unmitigated
disaster. Ever since taking power in 2021, President Joe Biden has been
alienating America's allies, coddling America's enemies, and making US
power in the region weaker.
Let's begin with Biden's support for the Palestinians. Shortly after
assuming the presidency, Biden restored aid to the Palestinians. To
date, his administration has given the Palestinians more than one
billion dollars in aid. Biden steadfastly believes that this support
will bring the so-called two-state solution closer to fruition. He's
dead wrong. His support for the Palestinians only encourages them to
step up their campaign of terrorism in the hopes of destroying Israel.
In fact, a study by Palestinian Media Watch found that when aid
to the Palestinians increases, as it did under the Obama administration
and now under Biden, Palestinian terrorist attacks against Israel
increase. In contrast, under the previous Trump administration, which
significantly cut aid to the Palestinians, attacks against Israelis
decreased.
Meanwhile, as Biden supports the Palestinians, he derides Israel,
America's greatest ally in the Middle East. The Biden administration
relentlessly criticizes the Jewish state for building homes for Israelis
in Judea and Samaria – because apparently, Jews living in their
ancestral homeland reduces prospects for peace. It doesn't. You know
what does reduce prospects for peace? Paying Palestinians generous
monthly salaries for killing Jews – a policy known as pay-for-slay,
which the Palestinian Authority refuses to end. But Biden doesn't seem
to care about that, nor does he seem to care that the PA continues to
indoctrinate Palestinian children to hate and murder innocent Jews.
Biden also doesn't seem to care that PA President Mahmoud Abbas is in
the 19th year of his four-year term. Yet, he has nothing but disdain for
Israel's democratically-elected government, because some of its members
are supposedly guilty of racism. This is the attitude of a president
who has no problem associating himself with antisemites like fellow
Democratic Party members Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib.
Biden won't even invite Israel's prime minister to the White House. But
you know who did extend an invitation to Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu? None other than the People's Republic of China, the emerging
superpower hoping to usurp US power in the Middle East and beyond. In
fact, even though President Biden has moved heaven and earth to support
the Palestinians, the Palestinians have responded by walking straight
into China's open arms, signing a "strategic partnership" with the
communist dictatorship last month.
China even managed to help negotiate the restoration of diplomatic
relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran. But the rapprochement between
the two arch-rivals is not just a result of Chinese diplomacy. It is
also the result of America's waning power in the Middle East under the
Biden administration. Saudi Arabia and the other Sunni Arab states in
the region can clearly see that Biden is not committed to preventing
Shiite Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. Indeed, word now has it that
Biden is negotiating a secret deal with Iran to contain its nuclear
ambitions rather than prevent them. The Sunni Arabs undoubtedly feel
abandoned by the US and have decided to try and mend fences with the
Islamic Republic in the hopes of persuading the mullahs not to harm
them. Good luck with that.
It's very tragic that Biden did not build on the success of the Trump
administration in the Middle East – the success demonstrated by the
Abraham Accords, by which Israel and four Arab states agreed to
establish full diplomatic relations. I can't help but wonder if Saudi
Arabia would already have joined the Accords if Trump was still in the
White House.
Biden also missed a golden opportunity to weaken, and even depose, Iran's Islamist regime when mass protests erupted in the country last September. But alas, he left the Iranian people at the mercy of the mullahs.
And unfortunately, Biden still has another two years in which to make the US a second-rate power in the Middle East by pushing away America's allies and indulging America's enemies in the region.
1 comment:
It is hard to do a good job on something if you truly do not give a shit about it.
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