Opinion

Biden has no endgame in Gaza

The reason so many people are puzzled about the Biden administration’s strategy or vision in Gaza is because it has neither. 

What is Joe Biden’s endgame in Gaza? 

I’ve been asked that question repeatedly in recent days. What does Biden see as the desired outcome in the Gaza Strip, as he backs an assault by Israel that has lasted more than three weeks and, as of October 30, has killed 8,306 Palestinians in Gaza, including 3,457 children, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health, as reported by Defense of Children International – Palestine?

The question assumes that Biden actually had a plan in backing Israel from October 7, when Hamas launched its bloody attack, resulting in the death of over 1,300 Israelis and taking some 230 hostages. That’s a faulty assumption. Instead, Biden was committed to supporting Israel’s actions in response to the attack, responses which, from the outset, were clearly intended to go far beyond anything that could reasonably be called “self-defense.”

Therefore, in order for Biden to have had an endgame, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would have had to have an endgame. He didn’t, and that was also clear from the beginning. His declaration that Israel was going to “eliminate Hamas” was empty sloganeering echoing the disastrous Global War On Terror, not a tactical aim. More to the point, Israel embarked on a campaign of bombing civilian sites throughout the entire Gaza Strip, including areas to which it had ordered Palestinians to flee. As the Israelis themselves said, their goal in the bombing campaign was to maximize damage, not precision. 

Biden’s goals in all of this have been short-term. He tried to delay Israel’s ground operation so that he wouldn’t have to explain to the American people why a record number of U.S. citizens were killed by Israel’s decision to ignore the welfare of the captives. Beyond those American citizens, Biden, despite his rhetoric, has shown no more concern for the hostages than Netanyahu, who has treated all of the hostages as a political tool. 

Initially, Biden hoped that Egypt and perhaps even Jordan could be convinced to take in the people of Gaza that Israel would drive out. But neither King Abdullah nor President Abdel Fatteh al-Sisi were receptive to an idea that would throw their countries into massive turmoil and rob them of their credibility by making them accessories to an ethnic cleansing campaign by Israel that could very well turn out to be more massive than the 1947-49 campaign. 

That leaves Biden without any sort of endgame. Neither he nor most Israelis can even imagine allowing Palestinians to determine their own fate and choose their own leadership. That would be much too close to acknowledging their basic rights, and Biden, and certainly Netanyahu, can’t have that.

Instead, Biden falls back on nonsense like a two-state solution and paying off the Saudis to normalize their relations with Israel. Ultimately, he is in this position because he blindly supported Netanyahu’s strategy, born of the same flawed thinking that led Israel to nurture Hamas in the 1980s in the first place: using the Islamist group to undermine the Palestinian Authority, which, because it was willing to sell out just about any Palestinian interest in the name of getting a state, was a greater threat to the Israeli right’s eliminationist agenda.

With no strategy behind the wanton destruction in Gaza and the more subtle, creeping ethnic cleansing going on in the West Bank, Biden and his representatives Antony Blinken, Lloyd Austin, and Linda Thomas-Greenfield can only continue to run interference for Israel while mouthing disingenuous platitudes about efforts to provide humanitarian aid in Gaza. 

On Tuesday, in testimony before the Senate Appropriations Committee Blinken—when he wasn’t being interrupted by protesters rightly calling him out for his support of Israel’s actions—mentioned one piece of what Biden wants to see after the dust settles. 

“At some point, what would make the most sense would be for an effective and revitalized Palestinian Authority to have governance and ultimately security responsibility for Gaza,” Blinken said, again glossing over the root of all the trouble: the inconceivability of Palestinians making their own decisions. That’s aside from the absolute lack of any credibility the PA has now, which has only been diminished even more dramatically by its unwillingness to defend the Palestinian people in either the West Bank or Gaza since October 7. 

Biden’s search for an endgame

As the days grind on and the death toll in Gaza grows during Israel’s aerial bombardment of the 2.2 million helpless Palestinians in the Strip, so have voices of protest in the United States and elsewhere. One of the good things for progressives in the United States is that Biden is a consummate politician. Whatever values he might hold, they’re easily shed if he understands that they threaten him politically. That’s the only reason there has been anything positive in his administration because he knows that progressives had played a major role in his electoral victory, and he needs to keep them on board. 

Unfortunately, as I’ve repeatedly noted, Biden mistakenly believes that the issue of Israel is a significant one for him electorally in 2024. He thinks that his blind support for Israel will win him pro-Israel support that he didn’t have in 2020. It’s a disastrous political miscalculation.

Electoral concerns do not fully explain his disastrous policy toward Palestine since the very start of his administration, but it does offer a partial motivation, especially when it concerns his obsession with a Saudi-Israeli normalization deal. But even at the height of Biden’s support for Israeli actions, it is clear that pro-Israel forces that oppose him are unmoved. However, now he has alienated the American Arab and Muslim communities to a degree one might have thought impossible given Republican Islamophobia. And progressives are being forced to choose between a fascist madman in Trump and a purveyor of genocide in Biden. That’s a recipe for immobilization, which Biden cannot afford, with clear disapproval ratings despite a strong economy and polls showing him trailing Trump

Biden’s weakness as a leader, utter lack of ethics, and absence of any serious thought in his administration on a strategy for the Middle East left him in a confused position when, as he was repeatedly warned would happen, Palestine and Israel erupted into a level of violence that is already rivaling even the 1947-49 war in carnage, death, and destruction.

So, when it started, he simply did what American presidents always do: he ran cover for Israel. But this wasn’t like the other times. The Hamas attack was unprecedented in Israeli history, and the entire populace was shocked, traumatized, and, most of all, enraged. Israel isn’t just isolating and bombing Gaza this time, it is killing at a rate it has never done before, while cutting off the entire Strip from water, food, medicine, fuel, in short, everything. And this is being broadcast throughout the world.

Biden remains committed to Israel’s murderous campaign, and has even attacked the many American Muslims and Jews, along with a handful of Congress members who have called for a ceasefire as, in the words of his spokesperson, “repugnant” and “disgraceful,” among other things.

But in more recent days, Biden has been forced to at least hint that there needs to be an end to this slaughter. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said on Monday, “We do not believe that a ceasefire is the right answer right now,” adding that, “We do not support a ceasefire at this time.”

This was a slight change in tone, implying that the time when Biden would support a ceasefire was coming at some future point. Yet it’s very difficult to see Biden doing that as long as Netanyahu is pressing forward with his offensive and that action is supported by the vast majority of Israelis and American supporters of Israel, even if many, perhaps most, of them would have preferred Israel try to free the hostages before taking more aggressive action.  

Biden lays out shallow thinking

On October 25, at a press conference in the Rose Garden with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Biden laid out a very vague notion of what he envisioned when the current Israeli onslaught is over. 

“[T]here’s no going back to the status quo as it stood on October the 6th.  That means ensuring Hamas can no longer terrorize Israel and use Palestinian civilians as human shields,” Biden began, immediately defaulting to a framework that is meant to deflect all culpability from Israel. “It also means that when this crisis is over, there has to be a vision of what comes next.  And in our view, it has to be a two-state solution.”

Biden presented this as if it is something new, when, in fact, it represents a desperate clinging to a fantasy that hasn’t been feasible since he was still representing the conservative wing of the Democrats in the Senate. 

Biden is also reacting to the desperation of liberal supporters of Israel who have clutched at the Hamas attack on Israel as “proof” that a two-state solution is the only one that can work, a mantra that is as false today as it has been for the decades that these folks have been parroting it. 

Biden then tried to put a new wrinkle on this threadbare case. 

“In the past few weeks, I’ve spoken with leaders throughout the region — including King Abdullah of Jordan, President Sisi of Egypt, President Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, and just yesterday with the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia — about making sure there’s real hope in the region for a better future; about the need — and I mean this sincerely — about the need to work toward a greater integration for Israel while insisting that the aspirations of the Palestinian people will be part — will be part of that future as well.”

Here, Biden gives the game away. His words continue to show that he is obsessively committed to the Israel-Saudi normalization deal while seeing Palestinian rights as an afterthought, a small “part of the future” that Israel enjoys as a full trade and military partner of Saudi Arabia. 

But these are just old ideas rehashed, none of them even Biden’s. His “two-state” thinking is a mere echo of the monotonous rhetoric from Washington since Bill Clinton. And his normalization idea is a mere continuation of Donald Trump’s policy, a policy which Trump, like Biden, also promoted as “good for the Palestinians.”

The reason so many people are puzzled about Biden’s strategy or vision for an endgame is that he has neither. 

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I submit this recent analysis by an Israeli as support for the idea that neither Biden nor Israel has a workable endgame plan:

As we enter into the fourth week of the Israel-Hamas war, a clear endgame for the war Israel launched in retaliation for the massacre of October 7 remains elusive….shock and vengeance are no substitutes for strategy, and the ground operations that Israel launched inside the Gaza Strip rapidly hasten the need to plan for the day after the invasion ends….but for a vaguely worded statement by Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant that Israel seeks “the creation of a new security regime in the Gaza Strip, the removal of Israel’s responsibility for day-to-day life in the Gaza Strip, and the creation of a new security reality for the citizens of Israel,” no clear vision for what Israel aims to achieve has been presented….First, the destruction of Hamas’s military and governing capabilities, which Israel has repeatedly declared to be its main objective, lacks the clarity of purpose and the certainty of its achievability.

https://time.com/6330197/diplomacy-israels-invasion-of-gaza/

The author then goes on to make some proposals, which I find rather unconvincing and vague.

A very interesting perspective on Biden’s awful response to Israel’s “murderous campaign”. He has shown the world there is no daylight between him and Netanyahu, by standing shoulder to shoulder with him, giving him all the weapons needed to kill mostly civilians, and waving that green flag, and giving him his blessing. Now Bibi seems to be emboldened by all that love and gifts showered on him by Biden, Sunak (the man who walked out of a military plane filled with weapons), Olaf, Macron, and the rest of the EU leaders, and slaughtering civilians, one children every 10 minutes. It seems these western nation still love the new ultra right wing government of Israel, despite Bibi’s efforts to erode democracy.

This will be Biden’s legacy, and he will forever have that the blood of thousands of people on his hands.
Those who were reluctant to support Biden, especially because of his old age, might definitely not vote for him now. The mess going on there for decades, is because Israel refuses to END the Occupation, stop stealing lands, and collectively punishing the Palestinian people who keep living without Freedom and Rights, in their concentration camp. Biden has NEVER called for the Occupation to end, nor pushed for the freedom that the occupied people are fighting for.
Biden is going to lose a heck of a lot of votes over this disaster, and the Democratic party some members.

This is exactly what happens when your foreign policy is entirely dictated by a foreign government, written down and handed over to you by special interest lobbyists, underwritten by single-issue messianic Jewish billionaires, and enacted by shameless political whores that would make the average prostitute blush.

When the likes of Biden listens to and acts in favor of his billionaire donors instead of his own non-political advisers, military, intelligence, and security analysts on this issues, how can we expect a coherent plan or policy?

This debacle has also proven that despite our craven leaders constantly bleating on and on and on and on about Israel being our most important, crucial, strategic, and vital ally in the Middle East, it is more clear than ever that it is in fact our greatest liability.

The nuclear-armed military upstart nation in the heart of the Middle East, yet again, got sucker-punched, outplayed, and bogged down by a rag tag group of militants that wouldn’t even fill a college football stadium, and guest who gets to yet again cover for them, bail them out, fork over yet another $14 billion, and get sucked into a potentially wider regional conflict? Us! And what do we get for decades and decades of support? Fuck all. Our “Greatest Ally in the Middle East™️” can’t even be arsed to lift a single finger to help or even facilitate getting out even one of the 500 trapped American citizens in Gaza. Not surprising when this was the exact same ingrates telling us to mind our own business and that “Israel isn’t another star on the American flag” mere months ago.

So who has been doing all the heavy lifting and hard work on our behalf so far? Qatar!

Qatar is where we have actual vital intelligence, military resources, bases, infrastructure, and troops stationed. Not Israel. Qatar is the one who has been facilitating negotiations to release American hostages. Not Israel. Qatar is the one along with Egypt providing aid to millions of innocent Gazans and trapped foreign nationals. Not lsrael, who cut electricity, water, communications, fuel, and vital aid. Qatar is the one running back channels. Not Israel, who is yapping like a dog into the abyss and listening to no one and nothing but its own propaganda echoing back. Qatar is the one that has helped and negotiated opening the Rafah border crossing to allow hundreds of foreign nationals out of Gaza. Not Israel, who bombed it and would rather kill 9,000 civilians (and counting) than even dream of letting a single foreign national safe passage into Israel through the Erez border crossing. Qatar, for all its many faults is the one showing us exactly who our real ally and vital strategic partner in the Middle East is when the chips are down.

The removal of Hamas from power is a reasonable aim, if not an achievable one. When the regime of a neighboring country indulges in mass murder and hostage taking, the removal of that regime is ultimately reasonable. Whether it is achievable is an entirely different question. The inability to concede the reasonableness of this goal undercuts Mr. Plitnick’s post.

Reply to Yonah Fredman: I want you to tell me what Israeli official communiques document the mass murder you refer to because investigative journalists have already debunked the, “40 decapitated babies”, the “raped women”, the “burned bodies in kibbutzim” as not the work of Hamas. They’ve also given us Israeli eye witness accounts from survivors of the devastation in the kibbutzim, as being perpetrated by Israel IDF soldiers in tanks shelling homes so killing militants and captives alike. The same was the case at the concert indiscriminate fire at militants and concert attendees alike. Survivors have also told us they were treated humanely by their captors and it is their view that their captors hoped for mutual prisoner exchanges not massacres. So you’ve got militants and captives dead in large numbers at the hands of the IDF, where are the mass murders located?