Newsletters

Weekly Briefing: Biden buckles (under the weight of 28,000 Palestinian deaths)

For the last four months the great despair and anguish of our American readers was that the official narrative has kept creaking along in utter indifference to atrocities and destruction on a scale that recalls World War 2. That is changing.

For the last four months the great despair and anguish of our American readers was that the official narrative has kept creaking along in utter indifference to massacres and atrocities and destruction on a scale that recalls World War 2. I remember that moment when Susan Abulhawa was thrown to the floor in the Philadelphia City Council as she tried to tell what was happening.

And so a belief arose inside the establishment that they could pull all this off without much leakage. Because Palestinian lives just don’t matter (as the lives of Israeli civilians killed on October 7 do).

This week there was a break in this duality. The Biden administration buckled under the political weight of so many civilian deaths. Biden has come to understand that most of the Democratic base sees the Israeli onslaught as a “genocide” and at a press conference he said that the Israeli military operation had been “over the top” and said he’d been saying as much for a while — he hasn’t.

Then it was reported in the New York Times that a national security aide had all but apologized to Arab-American leaders in Dearborn for the administration’s “missteps” in dealing with the war. Jon Finer said that Biden has “no confidence” in the Netanyahu government, that “abhorrent” Israeli extremists in government should have been denounced openly, and maybe most significant–

We have left a very damaging impression based on what has been a wholly inadequate public accounting for how much the president, the administration and the country values the lives of Palestinians. And that began, frankly, pretty early in the conflict

So, We do value Palestinian lives, Biden is saying, after four months of not caring about Palestinian lives. And more than 28,000 killings by Israel and unimaginable suffering. Without a political or strategic clue about what they are doing.

I have read smart responses to the Biden administration from Ilhan Omar and IfNotNow, among others, saying that this is lip service. You can’t be valuing Palestinian lives and seeking billions more for Israeli weaponry to pound and batter huddled families, as Israel has been doing for weeks on end with U.S. material and diplomatic support.

Still, I acknowledge some awakening in the establishment to the depth of Palestinian suffering. When Bernie Sanders and many other senators call for restrictions on aid to Israel, it is good to ask Where have you been, but also to note that they have made a tiny step in the right direction. When an NPR anchor says, “There seems to be nowhere to run for Palestinians in Gaza now,” you do want to scream, Where have you been for the last four months. And hope they are catching a clue.

The official narrative is cracking. A reality they have denied is breaking in on them. As it has never before in this country, due to Arab-American activism. We see it in the protests and disruptions of Antony Blinken’s bloodstained house and of Hillary Clinton’s public justification for war crimes.

There has long been a great imbalance in power between the progressive street and the Israel lobby. And this battle belongs to us. The Israel lobby has held sway over Middle East policy for over 50 years, despite many quiet challenges, from the likes of elected officials who soon vanished, Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, Donna Edwards, Brian Baird, and others.

The political news this week was that the blood of 28,000 Palestinians is lapping up against American obduracy, and creating a real political debate at last.

Thanks for reading.

5 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

So Biden is starting to feel the weight of 28,000 Palestinian deaths. Let’s take stock of what the moral universe looks like at the present moment:

“Nicholas Kristof recently had a NYT editorial titled “What Can We Possibly Say to the Children of Gaza?”… Israel, traumatized by the attack it suffered, elected to retaliate with 2,000-pound bombs, destroy entire neighborhoods and allow only a trickle of aid into the territory, which is now teetering on the brink of famine. The upshot is that this does not feel like a war on Hamas but rather a war on Gazans…. the atrocities suffered by Israeli civilians do not justify the leveling of Palestinian neighborhoods.”

Basically Kristof is saying that nothing Hamas did justifies this. Now let’s looks at some of the responses readers emailed in:

–” “What Can We Possibly Say to the Children of Gaza?”…Your government failed you. Unfortunately, it’s the one preferred by the majority of your adult family members and friends.”

–“I’m sorry, if you ally yourselves with evil, then when evil is destroyed you may be destroyed with it. Too bad there are children involved, but the children have parents who made choices.”

–“We might something along the lines of: don’t grow up to elect and normalize a terrorist ethos and government; don’t lob unguided missiles into your neighbor’s cities; don’t invade your neighbor’s territory and murder and rape 100’s on civilian non-combatants, don’t hide your neighbor’s kidnapped women and children in your houses.”

A surprising number of letters took this tone.
Draw your own conclusions about where we are as a species.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/03/opinion/gaza-israel-war-children.html

I saw Biden holding an impromptu press conference, probably against the wishes of his staff. After defending his memory, the ostensible purpose of the presser, he took a few questions. The very last question he took was on Gaza. He returned to the mic and said Israel’s actions were “over the top”.

Then he made an impassioned plea for more humanitarian aide for the Palestinians. I saw his impromptu presser as a way to tell the public his true views on Gaza, which were being sabotaged by his staff, most notably Antony Blinken, who appears to work for Netanyahu.

Biden is getting some backbone.

The Whitehouse comment line, 202-456-1111, has been steadily busy.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7eprLEMGc4