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Home»Opinion»OPINION | Biden’s conflict between Israel and Hamas is at a stalemate. He must choose a side.
Opinion

OPINION | Biden’s conflict between Israel and Hamas is at a stalemate. He must choose a side.

prosperplanetpulse.comBy prosperplanetpulse.comJune 14, 2024No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
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Hamas’ recent rejection of the U.S.-backed Gaza ceasefire and hostage agreement is not surprising. Despite wishful thinking from some Biden administration officials, easing the suffering in Gaza is not a priority for Yehya Sinwar, the architect of the October 7 massacre. Hamas’ military leader is well aware that the war he started has stirred up virulent anti-Israel sentiment around the world.

Sinwar also knows that a pause in the fighting won’t stop Israel from ousting him from the government. After a prisoner exchange, Israel could resume its campaign to eliminate Hamas. If Sinwar and his lieutenants defect to another country, as Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat did in Tunisia in 1982, Israeli intelligence could track them down. For now, Hamas has little incentive to retreat.

what teeth What is surprising is how much effort the Biden administration has put into that failed diplomatic approach, and how it appears to be torturing the same course now. At a press conference on Wednesday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken questioned whether Hamas was “moving in good faith” (do you think it was?), but said the administration was still “committed to closing the gap” in the negotiations.

How? Israel has a political and strategic need to eliminate Hamas as a fighting force in the Gaza Strip. Hamas has an existential need to survive for the next battle as the winds of international opinion increasingly favor it. The Biden administration appears to have labored for months under the assumption that this contradiction could be circumvented with sufficiently careful diplomacy. The result has been a predictable series of failed ceasefires.

It’s time for President Biden to stop trying to bridge an unbridgeable gap and use his power to force one side to submit to America’s will. That means either fully supporting Israel’s military objective of wiping out Hamas or openly calling for an end to the war that has given Hamas power. Biden has resisted taking either side out of political calculation, but his painful diplomatic tightrope has reached its limit.

The first option would be the natural one: Biden could declare: My Administration has been negotiating with Israel for months to obtain a generous ceasefire offer. We have hoped for good faith from Hamas leadership, but Hamas’ latest refusal has dashed those hopes. Israel now fully supports Israel’s military objectives to destroy Hamas’ military capabilities, kill its leadership, and disarm the entire Gaza Strip, no matter how long it takes. Think about it, Sinwal. You missed the best offer ever.

As long as Israel continues its military operations, Hamas may accept a hostage deal — not because it wants peace, but because its leaders are under siege and need a pause in the fighting to flee for their lives. Biden could hasten that day by stopping to flaunt the possibility of increasingly favorable terms for terror groups.

The second option would be to try to force Israel into a permanent ceasefire while Hamas remains the governing force in Gaza. Biden might declare: This war has gone on for too long and too many innocent people have been killed. It is true that Hamas has rejected my agreement to cease fighting, but that is because they believe that Israel will resume the war after it stops. So I promise Hamas that I will not allow Israel to resume the war. If Israel resumes the war, I will cut off military supplies to Hamas and end diplomatic support.

Another way Hamas could agree to a hostage deal would be if it was persuaded that a pause in the fighting would lead to a permanent end to Israeli attacks, giving it a chance to be reborn and lead the Palestinian cause.

Hamas is already preparing for a post-war settlement along those lines. As a report from the Washington Institute for Near East Policy explains, the terror group is vigorously building the institutional foundations to participate in a new Palestinian government. Hamas is more popular than rival Fatah and remains the most armed group in Gaza. Biden will have to defend Hamas’ continued dominance of Gaza politics as the price of tough measures to force Israel to end the war.

Either option — going all out to destroy Hamas or forcing Israel to allow Hamas to continue in power — can be justified by some sense of justice and morality. And both would be politically difficult for Biden: the former would further infuriate vocal critics on the anti-Israel left, while the latter would invite a bipartisan backlash even fiercer than when Israel threatened to lay down its arms if it entered the Hamas stronghold of Rafah.

But as the Israel-Gaza war drags on, some say Biden’s current triangulation, ineffectual exhortations, and endless failed negotiations are politically most harmful and least moral. The time has come for Biden to choose, and to defend politically: Israel’s terms or Sinwar’s terms.



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