Scoop: Internal State Dept. memo blasts Biden, U.S. policy on Israel-Hamas war
Nov 13, 2023
https://www.axios.com/2023/11/13/biden-gaza-hamas-policy-state-department-memo
An internal State Department dissent memo
accuses President Biden of "spreading misinformation" on
the Israel-Hamas
war and alleges that
Israel is committing "war crimes" in Gaza, according to a copy of the
memo obtained by Axios.
Why it matters: The scathing five-page memo — organized by a
junior diplomat who has suggested
on social media that
Biden's support of Israel has made him "complicit in genocide" in
Gaza — offers a rare look at the raw divisions within the Biden administration
over the Israel-Hamas
war.
- The
memo — signed by 100 State Department and USAID employees —
urges senior U.S. officials to reassess their policy toward Israel and
demand a ceasefire in Gaza, where more than
11,000 Palestinians
have been killed in the war, according to Gaza's Hamas-controlled health
ministry.
- Some
of the memo's language echoes that of progressive activists in the U.S.,
whose anger and protests over Biden's handling of the war have
rippled through
the Democratic Party — and created a new challenge for the president's
2024 campaign.
- Without
offering a specific example, the memo accuses Biden of "spreading
misinformation in his Oct. 10
speech"
supporting Israel, one of the signature addresses of his presidency.
- The
memo also said that "we strongly recommend that the (U.S. government)
advocate for the release of hostages by both Hamas and (Israel)" —
citing the "thousands" of Palestinians being held in Israel,
including those "without charge."
Driving the news: The memo, transmitted to the State Department's
policy office on Nov. 3, opens by noting the "recent atrocities committed
by Hamas on October 7th" — a reference to Hamas' attack on Israel that
killed 1,400 people and ignited the war.
- For
the most part, however, the memo's authors focus on Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's counterattack on Hamas in Gaza.
- Biden
has backed Israel's response while expressing concern about humanitarian
issues in Gaza, but the memo says Biden should do more to question
Israel's actions.
- Those
actions — which have included
cutting off electricity, limiting aid and carrying out attacks that have
displaced hundreds of thousands of Palestinians — "all
constitute war crimes and/or crimes against humanity under international
law," the memo alleges.
- "Yet
we have failed to reassess our posture towards Israel," the memo
states. "We doubled down on our unwavering military assistance to the
(Israeli government) without clear or actionable redlines."
What we're watching: Throughout the document, there are broader critiques
of U.S. policy in the Middle East and what the authors call a failure to
advance a viable path to a two-state solution in the conflict between Israel
and Palestinians, which Biden has said he supports.
- "Members
of the White House and (the National Security Council) displayed a clear
disregard for the lives of Palestinians, a documented unwillingness to
de-escalate, and, even prior to October 7, a reckless lack of strategic
foresight."
- The
memo also criticized Biden for "questioning the number of
deaths" in Gaza.
- On
Oct 27, Biden said he
had "no
confidence" in the figures provided by the health ministry in Gaza,
while also saying he was "sure innocents have been killed"
there.
The intrigue: It's unclear how many dissent memos have been
filed within the State Department during the Israel-Hamas war. Politico
reported last week on
a memo that called for the U.S. to "publicly criticize Israel's violations
of international norms."
- That
language is not included in the copy of the memo obtained by Axios.
Between the lines: Since the Vietnam War, the State Department has
maintained a "dissent channel" to give diplomats — in distant
embassies and in the department's headquarters — a way to register their
opposition to policies.
- Dissent
memos are supposed to stay within the building, but sometimes they are
leaked to the media.
- Recent
memos include a 2016 cable, signed by 51 diplomats, criticizing the Obama
administration's policy toward Syria, which
leaked.
- A
2021 memo on the U.S. decision to withdraw forces from Afghanistan did not
leak, but became
the subject of a showdown between Congress and the State Department.
What they're saying: The State Department "is proud there is an
established procedure for employees to articulate policy disagreements directly
to the attention of senior department leaders without fear of
retribution," a State Department spokesperson said.
- "We
understand — we expect, we appreciate — that different people working in
this department have different beliefs about what United States policy
should be," the spokesperson said.
The big picture: In Secretary of State Antony Blinken's public
and private diplomacy, he has worked to ensure the flow of humanitarian
assistance and minimize the military impact on Palestinian civilians, according
to an administration official.
- In
his visit to
Israel this
month, Blinken asked Netanyahu and members of Israel's war Cabinet to
begin humanitarian pauses in the fighting to allow aid to reach
Palestinian civilians in northern Gaza.
- Last
week, Israel agreed to begin "tactical localized humanitarian
pauses," Axios'
Barak Ravid reported.
- Last
month, Blinken met with some State employees who have criticized Biden's
approach, the
Huffington Post reported.
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