Jonathan Katz discusses what Biden told him in a recent interview and compares it with the administration’s record:
But his avoidance of specifics spoke to the other side of that coin: the fact that there has been zero evidence of any serious consequences in the seven months of this ungodly war. So far the U.S. response to countless war crimes in Gaza has been to briefly threaten symbolic sanctions against individual Israeli units and officials, then reverse them immediately. And to allow a weakened ceasefire resolution to pass the U.N. Security Council, then pretend like the resolution doesn’t count.
All the while, Biden – personally annoyed or otherwise – has kept the bombs and billions flowing.
Biden insisted that he has been “putting extreme pressure on the Israelis to back off and … open up humanitarian access in Gaza,” but this doesn’t line up with what the U.S. has done since the war began. Whatever pressure the president may have put on the Israeli government through verbal rebukes, it has been anything but extreme when it comes to actions. It gives us a good idea of how little real pressure the administration is prepared to put on Netanyahu if the president thinks that the minor token actions he has taken count as “extreme.” The mismatch between the gravity of the situation and the penny-ante response would be comical if hundreds of thousands of lives didn’t hang in the balance.
The administration’s project for delivering relief to Gaza – the ill-advised and inadequate floating pier scheme – is still in the process of being built. As expected, it is proving to be far too little and too late to contain the crisis. It was never a serious attempt to fight the mass starvation of Gaza’s population. Aid delivery continues to be severely limited by Israeli restrictions. The man-made famine created by the Israeli government is underway, as the IPC warned us about six months ago. There is still no major international response to the catastrophe unfolding before us. That U.S. leadership that Biden likes to celebrate so much is nowhere to be found.
The administration can’t claim ignorance as their excuse. They know very well how terrible the conditions are in Gaza. Their own officials have been warning them, but they don’t listen. According to a recent report at Devex, a confidential paper prepared by USAID for Secretary Blinken concluded that the Israeli government is in violation of the U.S. directive that recipients of military aid comply with international humanitarian law and allow unimpeded delivery of humanitarian aid. The USAID paper agreed with the assessments of outside groups that Gaza is swiftly plunging into famine:
The “deterioration of food security and nutrition in Gaza is unprecedented in modern history, exponentially outpacing in six months the long-term declines that led to the only other two famine declarations in the 21st century [bold mine-DL]: Somalia (2011) and South Sudan (2017),” the memo states.
Read the rest of the article at Eunomia
Daniel Larison is a contributing editor for Antiwar.com and maintains his own site at Eunomia. He is former senior editor at The American Conservative. He has been published in the New York Times Book Review, Dallas Morning News, World Politics Review, Politico Magazine, Orthodox Life, Front Porch Republic, The American Scene, and Culture11, and was a columnist for The Week. He holds a PhD in history from the University of Chicago, and resides in Lancaster, PA. Follow him on Twitter.
Can you eat empty rhetoric?….?…?…
Ah, I have an excellent and economical way to deal with this problem!
Just cut those billions a year, we give to ISRAHELL, and we’ll shift our priorities to Palestine. The advice I give is absolutely free.
I often wonder, why Christ has not appeared to you all in ISRAHELL and I think I know why…. You are simply boring and repetitive and that really can try his patience and even GOD’S.