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Israelis begin to sour on Biden as US ratchets up pressure over Gaza

The joke making the rounds in Israel’s political circles goes something like this: Everybody knows Joe Biden’s top priority is the two-state solution, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

It’s a play on President Biden’s insistence that a path to a Palestinian state figure in any planning for the “day after” the war in Gaza. But the punchline also suggests mounting dismay over what some here see as Mr. Biden’s political motivations in an election year.

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Israelis are keenly aware that the close bond between their country and the United States is fraying over the prolonged war in Gaza. But they blame politics and the U.S. election season for the shift.

Increasing its pressure on Israel, the U.S. allowed a United Nations resolution to pass Monday calling for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza.

Eli Avidan, a jeweler in downtown Jerusalem, says he remembers warmly Mr. Biden coming to Israel just days after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack. But he also recalls hearing the president describe Israel’s military operation recently as “over the top.”

“We see Biden is changing when it comes to Israel, and what can we say? This is politics,” he says.

Some Israeli observers say Mr. Biden remains generally well viewed, but they worry that hyperpartisan actors in both countries are responsible for dragging down relations. “Most Israelis still appreciate the Biden administration,” says Yossi Klein Halevi at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem. “But we have a minority on the hard right that stupidly thinks we can go it alone.”

The joke making the rounds in Israel’s political circles goes something like this: Everybody knows Joe Biden’s top priority is the two-state solution – the two states being Michigan and Pennsylvania.

The play on President Biden’s insistence that a path to a Palestinian state figure in any “day after” planning following the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza hints at the chafing that some Israelis feel over growing U.S. pressure on its close Middle East ally.

But the joke’s punchline also suggests the mounting dismay over what some here see as Mr. Biden’s political motivations as he faces criticism on his left for his pro-Israel stance – and a daunting electoral map in his reelection bid.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Israelis are keenly aware that the close bond between their country and the United States is fraying over the prolonged war in Gaza. But they blame politics and the U.S. election season for the shift.

“The U.S. is the best friend of Israel, but – we now see Biden is trying to do cheap politics on our backs,” says Hodaya, a Jerusalem resident sharing a sunny park bench with her father recently. “Real Americans love Israel because we share a love for freedom, democracy, and peace. Biden used to be like that,” she adds, “but now he changes because he wants to win again” in November elections.

As part of the Biden administration’s shifting posture toward Israel, it has increased its distance on the international stage, changing the consistent use of its veto in United Nations Security Council resolutions targeting Israel.

Craig Ruttle/AP

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield (center) abstains during a Security Council vote on a Gaza cease-fire resolution, at U.N. headquarters in New York, March 25, 2024.

After last week sponsoring a resolution calling for an “immediate and sustained cease-fire” in Gaza that was vetoed by Russia and China, the United States abstained Monday, allowing a more toughly worded measure to pass. The new resolution did not condemn Hamas for the Oct. 7 attack against Israel, nor did it link the cease-fire to the release of Israeli hostages held in Gaza, both previous U.S. requirements.

In a statement explaining the U.S. abstention, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that while the U.S. did not agree with all provisions in the text, it did consider the resolution “consistent with our principled position that any cease-fire text must be paired with text on the release of the hostages.”

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