Israel’s National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has accused US President Joe Biden of siding with the enemies of the Jewish state.
During an interview with The New York Times
published on Tuesday, Ben-Gvir said, “Presently, Biden prefers the line
of [Palestinian-American Democratic Representative from Michigan] Rashida Tlaib and [Hamas leader in Gaza Yahya] Sinwar to the line of [Israeli Prime Minister] Benjamin Netanyahu and Ben-Gvir.”
“I would have expected the president of the United States not to take their line, but rather to take ours,” he added.
While
the Biden administration provided unwavering early support for
Jerusalem in the wake of the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on Oct.
7, including Biden becoming the first sitting US president to visit
Israel during wartime, Washington has taken an increasingly critical
stance as the ground war against Hamas in Gaza enters its sixth month.
This culminated on Monday with the Americans deciding not to use
their veto power at the United Nations Security Council, allowing a
resolution to pass that for the first time decoupled a demand for a
temporary ceasefire from the release of 134 Israeli hostages still held
by Hamas.
In response to the US move, Netanyahu canceled a high-level delegation’s planned visit to Washington.
Netanyahu said that the changed US position “hurts the war effort and the effort to release the hostages” by giving Hamas hope that international pressure will bring about a ceasefire without requiring the terror group to release the captives.
The
Israeli delegation was supposed to discuss alternatives to a pending
IDF ground operation in Rafah city, Hamas’s last bastion in the Gaza
Strip. While Israel is adamant that the operation is required to achieve
its war goals of destroying Hamas as a political and military entity in
Gaza, the Biden administration opposes a full-scale offensive.
For his part, Ben-Gvir
in a statement called the passage of the UN resolution “proof that
President Biden is not prioritizing Israel and the free world’s victory
over terrorism, but rather his own political considerations.”
Ben-Gvir called for Israel to ramp up its military campaign against Hamas in Gaza.
In the Times
interview, the minister said that Biden was “enormously mistaken” to
pressure Israel on this matter, adding that he “constantly sought to
impose restrictions on Israel and talks about the rights of the other
side, who include, I remind you, many terrorists who want to destroy
us.”
No comments:
Post a Comment