Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, right, meets with President Joe Biden in Tel Aviv on Oct. 18, 2023. Netanyahu could expect a freer hand if Donald Trump returns to the presidency, but he must rely on Biden for another six months. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)

- Despite Biden's departure, Netanyahu's strategy in Gaza remains consistent, balancing U.S. relations and domestic politics.
- Biden's control over U.S. munitions and diplomatic support means Netanyahu must still cooperate with the current administration until January.
- Netanyahu might expect more freedom under a potential Trump administration but remains cautious, maintaining relationships with both U.S. political figures.
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JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel is unlikely to immediately change his approach to the war in the Gaza Strip following President Joe Biden’s decision to stand aside, even if he may privately welcome the president’s departure from the race, analysts said.
Netanyahu Would Likely Have Freer Rein in Gaza Under Trump
Netanyahu would most likely have freer rein in Gaza under a potential new Trump administration, but the prime minister must still work with Biden for the next six months, leaving him with little immediate room for maneuver, they said.
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Until January, Biden will control the delivery of U.S. munitions to Israel, as well as the level of U.S. diplomatic support at the United Nations at a time when global scrutiny of Israel has rarely been higher.
“Of course, Netanyahu benefits from a politically weak Biden, who is blamed by the Israeli right for restraining Israel,” said Mazal Mualem, an Israeli political commentator and a biographer of Netanyahu. “But Biden is still president and Netanyahu needs him,” she said.
Netanyahu Clashed with Biden
Netanyahu has clashed with the Biden administration over the scale of Israel’s bombardment of Gaza, the delivery of aid to Palestinian civilians and Israel’s failure to set out a clear vision for the territory’s postwar governance. Under U.S. pressure, Israel has slowed its military campaign in Gaza since January and has so far avoided a land war along Israel’s border with Lebanon, where for months it has exchanged missile strikes with Hezbollah, an Iranian-backed Lebanese militia that is allied to Hamas.
By contrast, Donald Trump has indicated that he would allow Israel to use greater force in Gaza, arguing that Israeli forces have “got to finish what they started, and they’ve got to finish it fast.” Trump also supports taking a more aggressive stance against Iran, and his reelection might allow Netanyahu to conduct more strikes on Iran and its proxy militias like Hezbollah, as well as the Houthis in Yemen.
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Still, with more than three months before the U.S. election, it is too early for Netanyahu to bank on Trump’s return. Netanyahu left Monday morning for Washington, where he is set to make a speech Wednesday to a joint session of Congress. Before taking off, he said he would use the speech to “tell my friends on both sides of the aisle that regardless who the American people choose as their next president, Israel remains America’s indispensable and strong ally in the Middle East.”
Asked if Biden’s decision affects Netanyahu’s approach to Gaza, an Israeli government spokesperson, David Mencer, said: “The short answer is no.”
Mencer added: “We’re going to thwart every future threat to the state of Israel from Gaza, and we will return home all of our hostages. None of that changes.”
In an illustration of the bind in which Netanyahu finds himself, Vice President Kamala Harris will sit behind him as he speaks Wednesday. By January, she could be sitting in the Oval Office as Biden’s successor.
Analysts say that Netanyahu was likely to try to maintain a functional relationship with Biden and Harris while avoiding causing offense to Trump. The prime minister once had strong ties with Trump, who helped him forge diplomatic relations with several Arab states and moved the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, all moves that benefited Netanyahu’s legacy.
Netanyahu Angered Trump in 2020
But Netanyahu angered Trump in 2020 by congratulating Biden on his return to office, and their relationship is still considered fragile.
Netanyahu’s initial response Sunday to Biden’s decision provided a template for how the prime minister would approach that balancing act.
Netanyahu did not immediately comment on Biden’s departure or thank him for his decades of support for Israel. That diplomatic nicety was left to Israel’s figurehead president, Isaac Herzog, and the defense minister, Yoav Gallant, both of whom hailed Biden’s relationship with the Jewish state.
But Netanyahu did swiftly announce that Israel would continue to negotiate for a cease-fire in Gaza, a move that is likely to please Biden, who has personally pushed for a truce for several months. And the following morning he said that the meeting with Biden would be “an opportunity to thank him for the things he did for Israel in the war and during his long and distinguished career.”
It is still possible that Netanyahu will agree to a cease-fire deal once the Israeli parliament, or Knesset, begins its summer recess at the end of July, according to Nadav Shtrauchler, a former strategist for Netanyahu.
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Without a sitting parliament, Netanyahu will be freer to act against the wishes of his far-right coalition allies. Some of them have threatened to bring down the government — a move that requires a vote in parliament — if Netanyahu agrees to a truce with Hamas.
Biden’s announcement “will make Netanyahu more confident that he’ll have Trump as a colleague again,” Shtrauchler said. “But he’ll still be careful and walk a line that keeps all options open — including a deal during the Knesset recess.”
Unclear if Biden Will Change Approach to Gaza
It is also unclear whether Biden will change his own approach to Gaza, now that he is unburdened by the need to campaign for reelection.
Some analysts say he could take a stronger line against Netanyahu, mirroring some past presidents who took stronger stances against Israel in the final months of their tenures.
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In a similar way, Biden may push “even harder now to end the fighting, since he’s going to want to leave some semblance of quiet behind as part of his legacy,” said Michael Koplow, an analyst of Israeli and U.S. politics at the Israel Policy Forum, a New York-based research group.
But there is no guarantee that Netanyahu will soften under greater pressure, given how he has already resisted months of U.S. calls for a cease-fire.
“Netanyahu has been making decisions based more on his domestic politics than on Biden’s preferences anyway, and that’s not going to change,” Koplow said.
Besides, Biden may simply stick to the same approach — broadly supporting Israel’s war while criticizing certain battlefield tactics and calling for a cease-fire. Even when he was still running for reelection, Biden repeatedly showed that he was ready to pay a political price among parts of his base for continuing to supply Israel with arms.
That suggests his decisions on Gaza were already “dictated by principle rather than politics,” Koplow said. “So I don’t think removing the election from his equation is going to lead to significant shifts.”
–
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
By Patrick Kingsley/Kenny Holston
c.2024 The New York Times Company
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