Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that a US threat to withhold some arms would not prevent Israel from continuing its offensive in Gaza, indicating it might proceed with an invasion of the packed city of Rafah against the wishes of its closest ally.
President Joe Biden has urged Israel not to go ahead with such an operation over fears it would exacerbate the humanitarian conidition in the Palestinian enclave. On Wednesday, he said the United States would not provide offensive weapons for a Rafah offensive, raising pressure on Netanyahu.
But in a statement released Thursday, Netanyahu said "if we have to stand alone, we will stand alone. If we need to, we will fight with our fingernails. But we have much more than fingernails."
Israel's top military spokesman, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, also appeared to downplay the practical impact of any arms holdup. "The army has munitions for the missions it plans, and for the missions in Rafah, too -- we have what we need," he said in response to a question at a news conference.
Video: PM Netanyahu reacts to Biden's statement on arms shipments / Credit: X/Israelipm
Israel has repeatedly threatened to invade Rafah, where some 1.3 million Palestinians – over half the population – have sought refuge.
Israel says Rafah is the last stronghold of Hamas and that the army must go in if it hopes to dismantle the group and return scores of hostages captured in the Oct. 7 attack that triggered the war. In an earlier response to Biden's decision, Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir wrote a post on the platform X with a heart between the words "Hamas" and "Biden." He and other ultra-nationalist members of Netanyahu's coalition support a large-scale Rafah operation and have threatened to bring down his government if it doesn't happen.
Israel launched a limited operation Israel earlier this week, in which a tank brigade captured the Gaza side of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt. It also complicated what had been months of efforts by the US, Qatar and Egypt to broker a cease-fire and the release of hostages. Hamas this week said it had accepted an Egyptian-Qatari cease-fire proposal, but Israel says the plan does not meet its "core" demands. Several days of follow-up talks appeared to end inconclusively on Thursday.
Some analysts said Biden's tough line against Israel, and the rift between the allies, threatened to weaken Israel's negotiating position and harden Hamas' stances. Hamas has demanded guarantees for an end to the war and a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza as part of any deal — steps Israel has ruled out.
"It sends a discordant message at a time when Hamas is holding out on a hostage deal in the hopes that pressure will grow on Israel and it will gain a cease-fire without having to give anything in return," the Israel Policy Forum, a pro-Israel organization based in New York, said.