Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has canceled an Israeli delegation’s trip to Washington after the U.S. refused to veto a U.N. Security Council reso...
How did you get from a vote on a particular wording of a particular resolution to “not supporting Israel”? Where did I say that anyone said the revolution would “fix everything”?
How did you get from a vote on a particular wording of a particular resolution to “not supporting Israel”?
The US not vetoing the resolution is being actively touted by Israel as the US not supporting them. Obviously it’s not actually true, but in foreign policy that kind of rhetoric “reversal” is a huge deal (and Netanyahu is playing it up to try to pressure Biden into backing down).
Where did I say that anyone said the revolution would “fix everything”?
Obviously “everything” is hyperbole, but your first comment in this thread said
You got your resolution, and now the situation is worse.
The situation is not worse, it is immeasurably better. Netanyahu’s anger is not just about a hit to his pride or something, it’s genuine rage at seeing the influence campaigns they run via groups like AIPAC fail to cajole the US populace into uncritical support, like they previously enjoyed from older generations. And he’s using it strategically to try to signal to people that it won’t work, just like Putin does about sanctions, and military aid to Ukraine, both of which actually have a huge impact.
Your assertion (and Biden’s belief) that the US’s rhetorical support of Israel gave them leverage over their actions, has been proven wrong, as many of us knew it would be. Netanyahu is an extremist, and just like no one expects ISIS to start being normal dudes if their friends just tell them honestly as friends that they need to cool it bro, neither will Netanyahu.
With them, you need tangible leverage to move the needle. Money and weapons are leverage. Threat of force is leverage. Threat of sanctions is leverage. (Assuming you actually will follow through, of course.)
What would actually have maybe gotten some reaction from Israel right off the bat? A forceful backing of the resolutions condemning Israel’s actions, and a threat to cut off weapons and military support. But instead Biden took so long to do anything, all while lobbying internally for more weapons for Israel, that Netanyahu can clearly see that he has the upper hand. It took months and months, and tens of thousands of dead Palestinians, for Biden to bring himself to have us abstain from vetoing a resolution. If that level of self-imposed inaction isn’t the height of fecklessness, I don’t know what is, though I also think Biden himself is just plain supportive of Israel in a way that most of the US is not.
Now, the resolution is mostly an incarnation of the US populace’s diminishing support for a genocidal regime, and that is immeasurably valuable (even if it won’t move the needle on Israel’s actions because of how long it took to come).
How did you get from a vote on a particular wording of a particular resolution to “not supporting Israel”? Where did I say that anyone said the revolution would “fix everything”?
The US not vetoing the resolution is being actively touted by Israel as the US not supporting them. Obviously it’s not actually true, but in foreign policy that kind of rhetoric “reversal” is a huge deal (and Netanyahu is playing it up to try to pressure Biden into backing down).
Obviously “everything” is hyperbole, but your first comment in this thread said
The situation is not worse, it is immeasurably better. Netanyahu’s anger is not just about a hit to his pride or something, it’s genuine rage at seeing the influence campaigns they run via groups like AIPAC fail to cajole the US populace into uncritical support, like they previously enjoyed from older generations. And he’s using it strategically to try to signal to people that it won’t work, just like Putin does about sanctions, and military aid to Ukraine, both of which actually have a huge impact.
Your assertion (and Biden’s belief) that the US’s rhetorical support of Israel gave them leverage over their actions, has been proven wrong, as many of us knew it would be. Netanyahu is an extremist, and just like no one expects ISIS to start being normal dudes if their friends just tell them honestly as friends that they need to cool it bro, neither will Netanyahu.
With them, you need tangible leverage to move the needle. Money and weapons are leverage. Threat of force is leverage. Threat of sanctions is leverage. (Assuming you actually will follow through, of course.)
What would actually have maybe gotten some reaction from Israel right off the bat? A forceful backing of the resolutions condemning Israel’s actions, and a threat to cut off weapons and military support. But instead Biden took so long to do anything, all while lobbying internally for more weapons for Israel, that Netanyahu can clearly see that he has the upper hand. It took months and months, and tens of thousands of dead Palestinians, for Biden to bring himself to have us abstain from vetoing a resolution. If that level of self-imposed inaction isn’t the height of fecklessness, I don’t know what is, though I also think Biden himself is just plain supportive of Israel in a way that most of the US is not.
Now, the resolution is mostly an incarnation of the US populace’s diminishing support for a genocidal regime, and that is immeasurably valuable (even if it won’t move the needle on Israel’s actions because of how long it took to come).