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As toll rises in Gaza, diplomatic and political costs mount for Biden

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Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Amid the war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, in Ramallah, West Bank, Nov. 5, 2023.

When President Joe Biden gave a prime-time speech last month expressing his 鈥渋ronclad鈥 support for Israel in its war with Hamas, he spoke of Israel and Ukraine as two democracies in existential battles with despotic forces set on annihilating them.

He had good reason to think that framing Israel鈥檚 war in that context would work well for him.

After all, Mr. Biden鈥檚 staunch support for Ukraine rallied Western powers to Kyiv鈥檚 cause, and his Ukraine policy is widely viewed as a standout foreign policy success.

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As Israel鈥檚 massive counteroffensive against Hamas continues, crucial Biden allies at home and abroad are alleging hypocrisy. Does the U.S. prioritize humanitarian aims only when convenient? The Biden administration is scrambling to prove otherwise.

Moreover, bipartisan support for Israel has historically been very strong.

But things aren鈥檛 turning out the way the president might have imagined.

With the death toll in Gaza reportedly surpassing 10,000 Monday as Israel pursues a relentless campaign aimed at destroying Hamas, and as Gaza鈥檚 humanitarian crisis only deepens, the political winds at home and abroad 鈥 and in particular in the Middle East 鈥 have shifted significantly.

On the domestic front, the coalition that put Mr. Biden over the top in key states in 2020 鈥 young people, African Americans, and other minorities including Arab Americans 鈥 is showing signs of unraveling.

Michigan is a case in point. Recent polls show support for President Biden plummeting in the state鈥檚 sizable Arab American community, whose overwhelming support in 2020 played an outsize role in delivering the battleground state to the blue column.

And overseas and especially among America鈥檚 Arab partners, opposition to Mr. Biden鈥檚 full embrace of Israel is intensifying 鈥 as Secretary of State Antony Blinken learned this weekend.

Meeting with Arab leaders in Jordan Saturday after a stop Friday in Israel, Mr. Blinken heard demands for a cease-fire in Gaza 鈥 something Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ruled out 鈥 while receiving a message that the United States is not doing enough to pressure Israel to modify its onslaught in Gaza, home to more than 2 million Palestinians.

鈥淯.S. policy at the moment is stoking further anger in the Arab states and across the Global South, not least because it is seen as being hypocritical in its application of international law,鈥 says Hugh Lovatt, a senior policy fellow in Middle East affairs at the European Council on Foreign Relations in London.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Secretary of State Antony Blinken (right) Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry (left) and Jordanian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi hold a press conference, after meetings about the war between Israel and Hamas, in Amman, Jordan, Nov. 4, 2023.

Hypocritical, he says, because the U.S. is not seen to be demanding that its ally Israel adhere to international humanitarian law and rules of war so soon after calling on the world to support Ukraine against Russia鈥檚 invasion based on international law.

The U.S. is on a tightrope between its commitment to an ally at its moment of deep distress 鈥 following the slaughter of 1,400 people in Hamas鈥 Oct. 7 attack 鈥 and its sense that the ally should be acting differently now for everyone鈥檚 long-term good, he says.

鈥淭his is a very difficult U.S. balancing act, pursuing a two-track policy that consists of (1) hug Israel closely, and (2) influence Israel to modify its actions in its war and to open up more widely to humanitarian steps,鈥 Mr. Lovatt says. 鈥淏ut the nuance is lost in the Middle East; in Arab capitals, they鈥檙e only seeing the first of these.鈥

Some U.S. officials admit privately to a growing frustration with Israel over its refusal to act on U.S. counsel both to modify its military campaign aimed at rooting Hamas out of Gaza, and to move more deliberately on easing what many experts say is a looming humanitarian catastrophe there.

Some reliable administration (and Israel) supporters are beginning to publicly express misgivings over Israel鈥檚 conduct of the war.

Last week Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat, called on Israel to 鈥渟hift鈥 its strategy, saying events including a deadly strike on a refugee camp suggest that Israel has 鈥渘ot struck the right balance between military necessity and proportionality.鈥

Secretary Blinken presented Israel with President Biden鈥檚 proposal for humanitarian 鈥減auses鈥 in the military campaign, which would allow for more humanitarian aid to get into Gaza and for negotiations aimed at freeing the more than 240 hostages being held by Hamas.

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters
Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Israeli President Isaac Herzog (left) in Tel Aviv, Nov. 3, 2023.

But Mr. Blinken was unable to report any progress on humanitarian pauses to Arab leaders 鈥 who in any case are pressing for a full cease-fire, something Mr. Netanyahu says will not happen at least until all the hostages are released. The leaders also told the secretary that instead of destroying Hamas, Israel鈥檚 war is more likely to create a new generation of religious extremists that will mean more trouble for everyone in the region, including Israel.

During a surprise stop in Baghdad Sunday, Mr. Blinken told journalists that getting to humanitarian pauses is a 鈥減rocess鈥 that will take more time.

鈥淚srael has raised important questions about how humanitarian pauses would work,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got to answer those questions.鈥

Still, many experts assume that at some point at least some form of pause in hostilities will come.

鈥淭he history of Gaza is a history of cease-fires called something else,鈥 says Jon Alterman, senior vice president and director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

鈥淭he U.S. view is that if the Israelis stop [the military campaign] for some set time, it will allow more humanitarian aid to get in and space to negotiate freedom of some hostages,鈥 Dr. Alterman says. 鈥淭he U.S. has a lot of room to pressure Israel. The question is whether that pressure will have a desired effect.鈥

鈥淢any American officials feel the U.S. learned a lot from the Iraq War and the Afghanistan War, and they鈥檙e sharing that with the Israelis,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭he Israeli response is that those experiences aren鈥檛 relevant to our particular situation.鈥

Whether President Biden can demonstrate enough influence with Israel to begin altering perceptions of him in key audiences at home and abroad remains to be seen, a variety of experts say.

Mr. Biden is a 鈥渧ery tactile president鈥 who 鈥渓ives for these moments of high pressure to figure out how to move people to where you want them to go,鈥 Dr. Alterman says.聽

The problem is that while the president works the 鈥減rocess鈥 of trying to transform influence with Israel into actions, key communities he needs at home and abroad are souring on him.

Matthew Hatcher/Detroit News/AP
Attendees wave flags and fly signs during a rally in support of Palestinians in Dearborn, Michigan, Oct. 10, 2023. The Hamas-Israel war has inflamed tensions between Jews and Muslims everywhere, including the Detroit area, which is home to several heavily Jewish suburbs and Dearborn, the city with the largest concentration of Arab Americans in the U.S.

鈥淭he administration needed to figure out how to walk a tightrope between support for Israel鈥 and pursuing long-term U.S. interests, 鈥渂ut instead it鈥檚 been a full bear hug [of Israel] with no counterbalancing actions,鈥 says James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute in Washington.

President Biden has made a number of public 鈥渕istakes鈥 that have sent his support among Arab Americans plummeting, Dr. Zogby says, including casting doubt on the high Palestinian death toll in Gaza because the numbers are from the Gaza Health Ministry, an agency of the Hamas government.

鈥淚t鈥檚 insulting, and it suggests Palestinian lives matter less than others,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he sense of betrayal in Arab American communities is strong enough that it could make a decisive difference next year in states like Michigan and Pennsylvania,鈥 he adds.

Indeed, a sense of U.S. complicity in what is seen by some as Israel鈥檚 disregard for civilian lives in Gaza was a common theme in large pro-Palestinian demonstrations this weekend both in the U.S. and around the world.

At the less emotional policy level, Dr. Zogby says frustration is building with the Biden administration for not pushing Israel harder to conduct its military campaign and articulate an endgame in a way that can draw in Israel鈥檚 Arab neighbors instead of alienating them.

Some say Israel, having developed stronger ties with some Arab states, is at risk of squandering regional support it鈥檚 going to need.

鈥淭he Arab states are unified in two things: an abhorrence of Hamas, and disgust at how Israel is carrying out this war with Hamas,鈥 Dr. Alterman says. 鈥淚srael needs to be mindful of this because it鈥檚 going to need to establish a sense of partnership with the Arab neighbors on a postwar Gaza. And the U.S.,鈥 he adds, 鈥渘eeds to be reminding the Israelis of this early and often.鈥

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