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53639


Date: April 06, 2024 at 05:53:36
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Biden's inaction on Gaza puts US troops at risk

URL: Biden's inaction on Gaza puts US troops at risk


"After the Israeli strike on Iran's consulate in Syria, a ceasefire would go a
long way at mitigating potential escalation points

ADAM WEINSTEIN, TRITA PARSI
APR 04, 2024
Israel’s strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus earlier this week may
shatter the month-long ceasefire between U.S. troops and Iran-aligned
militias in Iraq and Syria.

While a combination of U.S. strikes and Iranian pressure has reined in the
militias for the past two months , Israel may prematurely end the
arrangement that kept American soldiers out of harm's way, all the while
President Joe Biden has done precious little in practical terms to protect U.S.
personnel in the long term by securing a lasting ceasefire in Gaza.

The temporary truce between the U.S. and the Iran-supported militias was
never likely to be enduring. A complete end to the attacks would invariably
require a ceasefire in Gaza, a reality that Biden administration officials
recognize. Just last week, Biden’s own Special Envoy to Yemen, Timothy
Lenderking, publicly stated that a ceasefire in Gaza would halt Houthi attacks
in the Red Sea.

But even if the truce survives Israel’s attack in Damascus, Biden can’t count
indefinitely on luck and should not gamble with the lives of American troops.
Thus far, he has squandered the opportunity that the truce provided to
secure a ceasefire. The Damascus strikes should be a wake-up call for the
White House to get serious about pushing Israel to cease its bombardment
of Gaza.

While attacks by Iran-aligned militias and the Houthis predate the Gaza
conflict, the recent escalation and brazenness since last October are
undeniable. According to the Pentagon, there were no recorded attacks by
Iran-aligned militias in the third quarter of 2023, which concluded just one
week before Hamas’s assault on Israel. However, following the outbreak of
the Gaza conflict, attacks resumed, with the Pentagon documenting at least
134 incidents targeting U.S. interests in Iraq and Syria in the final three
months of 2023. (The only period in which there were no attacks against U.S.
interests by the militias was during the brief ceasefire in November 2023.)

But attacks by the militias on U.S. troops have effectively ceased. That may
now change, thanks to Israel.

Tehran sees the Israeli strike that killed the senior commander of Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) in Syria and Lebanon as a
significant escalation. The Iranians are taking a page out of Washington’s
playbook by holding the U.S. responsible for Israel’s actions since
Washington insists that Tehran is responsible for Houthi attacks by virtue of
Iran arming and funding the Yemeni movement. This was signified by Tehran
sending a message to Biden through Swiss intermediaries, which most likely
contained a warning that Washington’s failure to prevent Israel’s actions
could prematurely end the truce with the militias. Indeed, in secret talks held
in Oman between senior U.S. and Iranian officials, the American demand for
Tehran to rein in the militias and the Houthis was met with an Iranian
counterdemand that Biden reins in Israel.

Hopefully, cooler heads will prevail in Tehran. Washington recognizes that
Iran can badly afford an open war with Israel. Iran has already absorbed
significant blows from Israel without retaliating, which is partly explained by
Tehran’s focus on the long game. But this posture is under intensified
pressure from hardline elements inside the regime who argue that the failure
to respond has undermined Iran’s deterrence against Israel and Iran’s
credibility among Middle Eastern powers.

Biden’s policy, however, cannot be premised on cooler heads prevailing in
Iran. When it comes to protecting U.S. troops beyond a temporary truce —
which requires a ceasefire in Gaza — Biden’s conduct has been nothing short
of a dereliction of duty.

For the first five months of the Gaza conflict, the Biden administration did
little more than issue one tepid call for an eventual ceasefire “as soon as
practicable.” Last month, it finally allowed a U.N. Security Council Resolution
for a Gaza ceasefire to pass by abstaining from the vote. But it then
undermined its own abstention by labeling the resolution nonbinding. White
House national security communications adviser John Kirby further diluted
the impact of the abstention by insisting, “our vote does not, I repeat does
not, represent a shift in our policy.”

What exactly is this policy? The administration’s public statements, including
Kirby’s remarks after the Israeli strike that killed World Central Kitchen aid
workers, seem more like a public relations effort for Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu than a coherent policy to promote U.S. interests.
President Biden has continued to sidestep Congress to send weapons to
Israel, weapons used in the killing of over 32,000 Palestinian civilians. The
administration permits Israel to obstruct humanitarian aid while shielding it at
the U.N. by vetoing three ceasefire resolutions and refusing to call for an
unconditional ceasefire.

Besides protecting Israel from any accountability, Biden has invested his
diplomatic capital in a thus far unsuccessful mediation between Israel, Egypt,
Qatar, and Hamas to secure a deal that releases all the Israeli hostages and
brings about a ceasefire.

While this comes across as a laudable effort on the face of it, it contains a
significant problem that has helped prolong the slaughter in Gaza: Just as
Biden’s draft U.N. resolution linked a ceasefire with a hostage release, so
does the deal he is trying to secure with Israel and Hamas. This linkage
effectively justifies Israel’s indiscriminate bombardment of Gaza: As long as
the hostages aren’t released, this approach legitimizes the continued
bombardment of civilians in Gaza.

As such, Biden’s approach has not only failed to secure the release of the
Israeli hostages, but it has effectively taken 2 million Gazans as hostages
whose lives can only be made safe once the roughly 130 Israeli hostages are
released. Moreover, given the regional dynamics and Israel’s desire to
expand the war to Lebanon and Iran, the lives of American troops in the
region are now also hostages to Biden’s flawed approach. Biden is effectively
prioritizing Netanyahu’s desires (who incidentally isn’t prioritizing the release
of Israeli hostages and who wants a prolonged and widened war) over the
lives and interests of Americans.

This is why the U.N. resolution that passed last week de-linked the hostage
release from a ceasefire and treated both as independent imperatives. This
would be more effective in saving the lives of civilians in Gaza, saving the
lives of U.S. troops by avoiding regional escalation, and saving the lives of
the Israeli hostages.

This is also the position of Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), an otherwise
staunch supporter of Biden. “I have come to the conclusion that there needs
to be an immediate pause to hostilities,” he said recently. “I would not
condition it upon the release of the hostages. I hope that there is an
agreement between Hamas and Israel with intermediaries that allows for the
release of the hostages. But I think that the humanitarian situation on the
ground is so dire today, with famine lurking, that Israel needs to stop military
operations right now and focus on restoring order and combating famine.”

For the sake of the Israeli hostages, the civilians in Gaza, and American
servicemen and women in the Middle East, Biden would be wise to listen to
the Senator from Connecticut."


Responses:
[53640] [53642]


53640


Date: April 06, 2024 at 06:22:37
From: shatterbrain, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Biden's inaction on Gaza puts US troops at risk


Bibi and Biden really clearly shows that it does in fact
take two to tango.....all the way to the Gates of Hell.


Responses:
[53642]


53642


Date: April 06, 2024 at 08:47:00
From: chaskuchar@stcharlesmo, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Biden's inaction on Gaza puts US troops at risk


both need prayers to keep out of hell


Responses:
None


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