Jonathan S. Tobin

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of the Jewish News Syndicate. Follow him on Twitter: @jonathans_tobin.

Biden's friendship toward Israel has always been conditional

No amount of eyewash about belief in bipartisan American support for the US-Israel alliance will be enough to cushion the damage an openly antagonistic administration could do.

 

As far as Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid are concerned, this week has brought a perfect storm of circumstances that threaten to complicate their hopes for a better relationship with the United States. Both men, each for their own reasons, see establishing a good rapport with President Joe Biden and his administration as one of the main goals of their coalition government that took office in June.

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Yet the US administration issued blistering criticism concerning its renewed commitment to reopening a US consulate in Jerusalem and settlement building in the West Bank. Add to that the news that Iran is returning to nuclear talks in Vienna. These were body blows to hopes that their ousting of former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, viewed by Biden's team as the devil incarnate, would ensure the president's goodwill and protect them against the kind of hostility that was the hallmark of US attitudes toward Jerusalem the last time Democrats were in power.

Perhaps they knew that the announcement that a few thousand new homes would be built in existing West Bank settlements, as well as the designation of six Palestinian non-governmental organizations as terror groups, would provoke Washington's ire. The two are also painfully aware that their attempts have failed to persuade the Americans to back off their determination to renew efforts to appease Iran and bring it back into what Israel believes is a disastrous nuclear deal. All the sappy rhetoric Bennett and Lapid could publicly muster about their affection for Biden and belief in his friendship for Israel flopped, as did the strong arguments and warnings about the folly of engagement with Iran that they delivered in private.

Moreover, even if he is willing to wait until after the Israeli coalition passes a budget in November, the president's clear determination to reopen a US consulate in Jerusalem that would serve as an embassy to the Palestinians puts their government in jeopardy should they fail to stop something that undermines Israel's sovereignty over its capital.

The question Bennett and Lapid must ask themselves is whether, even without having Netanyahu as their antagonist, this US administration is really prepared to return to the state of bilateral ties we saw in December 2016. If so, the Jewish state is in for a rough ride in the coming years. No amount of eyewash about a belief in bipartisan American support for the US-Israel alliance will be enough to cushion the damage an openly antagonistic administration could do.

The arguments for a worst-case scenario for a rapid and steep decline in amity between the two nations are strong. The first concerns the personnel in place in the US State Department and the White House.

Much was and continues to be made of Biden's, Secretary of State Antony Blinken's, and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan's warm feelings for Israel. Although this trio has had many disagreements with Israeli leaders over the years, especially during former US President Barack Obama administration, in which they all served, the claim isn't false. Unlike Obama, all three have a certain degree of affection for the Jewish state, and in Biden's case, the professions of friendship date back to the beginnings of his half-century of public office-holding.

Yet Biden's friendship has always been conditional. As former US Defense Secretary Robert Gates admirably summed up his career, the US leader has been wrong about every important foreign-policy issue for 40 years. While he always tells listeners how much he loves Israel, he also thinks he knows better than its leaders and its people when it comes to what is in their best interests.

He believes in applying "tough love" to naughty Israelis who need American guidance. Nor does Biden take kindly to criticism. His self-esteem is such that he regards challenges to his diktats as insults. Netanyahu learned this when the announcement of home-building in Jerusalem in 2010 during a Biden visit led to a major incident between the two countries because of the then-vice president's allegedly hurt feelings.

If anything, Biden has grown even more thin-skinned since, as his consistently short-tempered responses to non-sycophantic questions from citizens and journalists alike have shown in the last two years.

Biden and his chief advisers are not complete fantasists, so unlike Obama, they don't actually expect to miraculously bring about a two-state solution the Palestinians aren't interested in. Should Bennett summon up the spine to resist Biden's will on the consulate or find the temerity to publicly challenge him on Iran, the blowback may have serious consequences.

While the three men at the top are conditional friends of Israel who think they should save the Jewish state from itself, Biden's appointments at the next level of authority aren't quite so affectionate. Some, like US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Robert Malley, US special envoy for Iran, are veterans of both the Clinton and Obama administrations and have a far less favorable view of the relationship. Sherman was the architect of disastrous nuclear agreements with both North Korea and Iran and has learned nothing from her mistakes. Malley was, among other things, an apologist for Palestinian leader/terrorist Yasser Arafat and a leading advocate for a rapprochement with Iran.

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Just as troubling is the fact that throughout the federal bureaucracy, there are people, like, Hady Amr, assistant secretary of state for Israeli and Palestinian affairs, who reflect the views of the Democratic base on the Middle East. Younger and more in tune with the intersectional ideology and critical race theory ideas that dominate the academy and left-wing activist discourse, they view Israel with a degree of hostility not seen among older peace processors and diplomats.

No less important a factor is Biden's need to be in sync with congressional progressives whose side he has taken on domestic issues. Rather than stand up to the leftist "Squad" and its antisemitic and Israel boycott-supporting members, Biden prefers to court them. This is not so much a matter of ideological affinity as a political necessity. He knows the Left represents the future of his party and has far more energy and influence with the Democrats' cheering sections in the media and pop culture than the aging pro-Israel moderates, even if the latter outnumber them.

That means that any defiance of the administration from Israel will serve to provide an opportunity for the Left to become even more assertive in their attacks on Israel under the guise of a defense of the president.

It makes for a daunting prospect for those in Israel or the United States who hold onto a belief that the coming years won't be a rerun of the nonstop battles between Washington and Jerusalem that characterized the relationship between Obama and Netanyahu from 2009 to 2016.

Yet Bennett and Lapid are not without hope that they can keep the situation from getting out of hand.

First, they can seek to hold Biden to his promise about keeping disputes with Israel private, rather than letting them play out in public as Obama did. If so, even the most bitter of disagreements won't seem quite so bad.

Second, they can hope that Israel's enemies will, as they have so often in recent history, overplay their hand and force Biden's team back into Israel's corner. Palestinian rejectionism and support for terror and Iran's will to achieve its nuclear ambitions – as well as its assessment that Biden is too weak to stop them from achieving any of their goals – could ultimately prove decisive.

Lastly, they may also count on the dysfunction of the Biden administration. In the past nine months, the Democrats have made a muddle of a host of challenges, including the disaster in Afghanistan, the crisis at the southern border, the collapse of the supply chain for products, and economic malaise that, along with the coronavirus pandemic, won't go away. These issues have sent Biden's polling numbers deep underwater, despite beginning his presidency with a vast store of goodwill and support from those who hoped he represented a calming influence and competence.

Unlike Obama, who had political capital to burn on futile Middle East policies and a pointless feud with Netanyahu, Biden has none to spare. Israelis can only hope that he is wise enough not to waste any on equally foolish spats with whoever is running Israel in the coming years – whether it's Bennett, Lapid, or Netanyahu – that will do nothing to ensure American security priorities or the political prospects of the Democrats. Whether such hopes are vindicated is up to Biden and not his Israeli interlocutors.

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org.

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