Over the past seven weeks, the impact of Israel’s massive military campaign in Gaza has become plain.
According to the United Nations, 67 per cent of the more than 14,000 people killed in Gaza are thought to be women and children, about 70 per cent of the population has been displaced, and Gaza’s health system has collapsed.
First, while there is no justification for the appalling Hamas attacks on Israel, it is clear such violence did not come out of a clear blue sky, as the Biden administration has claimed. It is no secret that Palestinians’ desire for political self-determination in the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem has been frustrated by more than 50 years of Israeli occupation.
Second, Biden’s carte blanche support for Israel’s right of self-defence undermines his administration’s commitment to an international rules-based order.
While Washington says it respects international humanitarian law, this claim is widely seen as diplomatic cover for America’s complicity in the Netanyahu government’s collective punishment of civilians in Gaza.
Israel’s right of self-defence is not limitless, and Biden’s claim that US support for Israel is comparable to its aid to another democracy, Ukraine, is hardly persuasive. Critics point out that Israel is an occupying power while Ukraine is defending against an occupying power.
Third, it is deeply troubling that the Biden administration has shown few qualms about fully backing Netanyahu’s hyper-military approach to the Hamas terrorist threat.
No decision maker, according to the great strategist Carl Von Clausewitz, should ever enter a war without a clear political objective in mind. Yet the Netanyahu government seems to have none except the complete destruction of Hamas.
After seven weeks of war, it is not clear Hamas can be destroyed. How many more innocent Palestinians will have to die before that quest is realised or abandoned?
Israel-Gaza war: is a two-state, two-economy solution still possible?
Israel-Gaza war: is a two-state, two-economy solution still possible?
Fourth, the Biden administration’s unconditional support for Netanyahu’s war has proven a strategic windfall for America’s adversaries.
If Biden truly wants America to remain essential in international affairs, he will have to adopt a more balanced approach between Israel’s security needs and the Palestinians’ long-standing desire for statehood.
In this vein, Biden might reflect on what president John F. Kennedy said 60 years ago: “If all nations could refrain from interfering in the self-determination of others, the peace would be much more assured.”
Robert G. Patman is an Inaugural Sesquicentennial Distinguished Chair and a specialist in international relations at the University of Otago