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US bid to cement global leadership stumbles in Gaza

When Russia invaded Ukraine last year, the overwhelming majority of United Nations members – standing by the United States – deplored Moscow’s aggression.

But last week, that overwhelming majority voted against Washington to insist that Israel should declare “a sustained humanitarian truce” in its brutal bombing of the Gaza Strip that has killed nearly 9,000 people, according to local authorities.

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Joe Biden’s bid to reassert U.S. global leadership is running into international doubts over Washington’s support for Israel. It would help if he could impose a humanitarian pause on Israel’s Gaza assault.

These doubts about U.S. support for Israel are straining coalitions that the U.S. president has been counting on to reassert American global leadership in the face of the rival ambitions of Russia, China, and Iran.

World attention is showing signs of shifting away from last month’s attack on Israel to focus more on the humanitarian crisis and civilian casualties in Gaza.

The Biden administration is not about to weaken its support for what it sees as Israel’s right to defend itself in the wake of the killing and abduction of hundreds of its civilians. But it is clearly aware of the diplomatic price it may pay for that support.

Joe Biden this week added his voice to calls for a “pause” in hostilities.

If the U.S. president can use his influence to ensure that humanitarian relief reaches the residents of Gaza, he will have greatly reinforced his bid to reassert his country’s global moral and political leadership.

Two wars, each with high stakes and painful costs, are together posing a critical test of President Joe Biden’s core foreign policy vision: a vigorous reassertion of America’s post-World War II role as global leader.

That’s because the political passions stirred by the wars in Ukraine and Gaza are threatening the support he will need to put that vision into practice.

Mr. Biden sees the catalysts for both conflicts – Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, and Hamas’ Oct. 7 rampage through southern Israel – as a single challenge. “Hamas and Putin,” he declared in a rare Oval Office address on Oct. 19, “want to completely annihilate a neighboring democracy.”

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Joe Biden’s bid to reassert U.S. global leadership is running into international doubts over Washington’s support for Israel. It would help if he could impose a humanitarian pause on Israel’s Gaza assault.

But key political constituencies, at home and abroad, are not convinced about that parallel.

At home, bipartisan support for helping Israel remains strong. But with regard to Ukraine, it is fraying. A growing number of Republicans in the House of Representatives, echoing former President Donald Trump, question continued U.S. support for Kyiv. The newly elected House speaker, Mike Johnson, this week proposed a funding package limited to supporting Israel.

Mr. Biden may yet muster sufficient Republican support for Ukraine.

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