US will take massive hit in global standing over
Israel
Washington's seeming refusal to use its leverage to
stop civilian carnage may do more damage than even the Iraq War, say experts.
NOV 15, 2023
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/world-reaction-israel-gaza/
This past weekend saw the publication of a disturbing
report from Axios,
following a phone call between Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and his Israeli
counterpart.
According to unnamed sources, the outlet reports,
there are growing fears within the Biden administration that the Israeli
government wants to provoke Hezbollah into starting a wider regional war that
would envelop Lebanon and other nearby countries, as well as the United States.
It’s a powerful reminder that the Biden
administration’s current policy of unconditional support for the Israeli
government’s war on Gaza carries with it no upsides and only downsides in
regards to U.S. interests.
Avoiding another Middle Eastern war is a core priority
for President Joe Biden, who both campaigned on ending “forever wars,” and has
expressed concern about the U.S. capacity for a future military
confrontation with China.
In fact, according to Axios, Austin’s weekend phone
call was precisely to register his concern over the Israeli attacks in Lebanon
and “the need to contain the conflict to Gaza and avoid regional escalation.”
U.S.officials have been reportedly trying to
prevent this outcome
from the start of the conflict.
Short of a full-blown war, Washington’s support for
the war is already leading to U.S.casualties. As of Monday, U.S. and coalition
forces have suffered at least 52
attacks since
October 17, injuring 56 troops in Iraq and Syria. In a classic case of
tit-for-tat, four of those attacks took place this past Sunday alone in
response to U.S. airstrikes on Iran-linked facilities, which were themselves a
response to earlier militia attacks on American targets in the region over
Washington’s backing for Israel.
At one point, a drone launched by an Iran-backed drone
crashed into the U.S.barracks at an Iraqi air base, failing to kill U.S.troops only because it was
defective.
There are few greater interests of a nation than
ensuring the safety and security of its citizens. The Biden administration
certainly thinks so, since it has repeatedly invoked the U.S. citizens taken as hostages by Hamas and
made clear the importance it places on their safe return. Yet U.S. citizens
remain trapped in Gaza, their lives threatened by not just
Israel’s relentless bombing campaign, but by the siege that has created a
devastating humanitarian
crisis in the
territory.
The longer the war goes on, the bigger the risk to
these Americans’ lives.
At the same time, administration officials are already
warning the war is going to inflame terrorism, the very thing the United States
spent the past two decades, thousands of lives, and trillions of dollars trying
to combat. The U.S. State Department issued an alert early on in the war that there was an
increased “potential for terrorist attacks, demonstrations or violent actions
against U.S. citizens and interests.” A leaked intelligence bulletin around the
same time warned that Hezbollah and Al Qaeda affiliates were
calling for attacks on U.S. citizens and interests over the conflict, and that
the October 17 blast at al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City — responsibility for
which is still undetermined — would “likely continue to draw public backlash
and organized responses.” (The Israeli military has since repeatedly attacked
multiple hospitals in Gaza).
Similar warnings abound. The Department of Homeland
Security has cautioned that the United States is “in a heightened
threat environment” as a result of the war. FBI Director Chris Wray told Congress that “multiple foreign terrorist
organizations have called for attacks against Americans and the West,” and that
“the ongoing war in the Middle East has raised the threat of an attack against
Americans in the United States to a whole 'nother level.”
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Charles Q. Brown
has said the unprecedented rate of civilian slaughter will likely create
more militants, stressing that “ the faster you can get to a point where
you stop the hostilities, you have less strife for the civilian population that
turns into someone who now wants to be the next member of Hamas.”
Meanwhile, the war is doing profound reputational
damage to the United States, according to both officials from the region and
inside the administration itself. A diplomatic cable obtained by CNN stated that U.S. diplomats in Arab countries had warned
the White House National Security Council, CIA, and FBI that Biden’s support
for the war “is losing us Arab publics for a generation.”
This almost exactly
echoes what unhappy
State Department officials told HuffPost they were hearing from their Arab
government counterparts.
A dissent memo organized by State staffers reportedly warns
that U.S. failure to publicly criticize Israeli violations “contributes to
regional public perceptions that the United States is a biased and dishonest
actor, which at best does not advance, and at worst harms, U.S. interests
worldwide.”
Indeed, the Washington Post recently reported, based on the words of analysts and Arab officials,
that U.S support for Israel’s actions “risks lasting damage to Washington’s
standing in the region and beyond” and has been a “constant source of friction”
as Secretary of State Tony Blinken has toured the Middle East. Arab leaders
have repeatedly, publicly criticized the United States.
“Arab and Global South officials are bewildered by
Biden's indifference to how his blocking of a ceasefire is plummeting America's
standing globally,” says Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy
Institute for Responsible Statecraft. “Arab officials have told me that Biden
has done more damage to America's standing in the region than George W Bush did
with his illegal invasion of Iraq.”
“All the work we have done with the Global South [over
Ukraine] has been lost,” one senior G7 diplomat told the Financial Times early on in the war. “Forget
about rules, forget about world order. They won’t ever listen to us again.”
Yet Biden and other U.S.
officials have
repeatedly set as a high priority the defense and rebuilding of this very global order, which the
administration says underpins U.S. security and prosperity.
Steadfast U.S. support for Israel has been typically
justified on the basis that, for all the criticism leveled at the United States
over it, it holds more benefits than drawbacks for U.S. interests. But it is
impossible to make that argument for the Biden administration’s support for
Israel’s current war, which is doing profound reputational damage to the United
States and risks the deaths of untold numbers of Americans.
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