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Biden Downplays Disagreement With Netanyahu On Palestinian Statehood

Biden Downplays Disagreement With Netanyahu On Palestinian Statehood

Hours after a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, U.S. President Joe Biden played down his disagreement with Netanyahu over a future Palestinian state as a political goal in postwar Gaza.

Biden told reporters Friday at the White House he believed “there are several types of two-state solutions” and that Netanyahu may be open to one of them.

“There are several countries that are members of the U.N. that … don’t have their military, several states that have limitations,” he said. “And so, I think there are ways in which this can work,” Biden said, providing the most detail so far about his conversations with Netanyahu on Gaza’s future.

Biden also dismissed the notion that a two-state solution between the Israelis and Palestinians could not be reached with the current Israeli government in power — the most hard-line in the country’s history.

The Middle East has been a tinderbox since Iranian-backed Hamas launched a terrorist attack on Israel on October 7, killing at least 1,200 people while taking about 240 people as hostages, Israel said. Israel’s response has killed more than 24,000 Palestinians, a large percentage of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

On Thursday, Netanyahu said he told the United States he opposes Washington’s long-standing support for the creation of a Palestinian state following Israel’s war with Hamas, prompting criticism from some Democratic lawmakers. The White House denied that Netanyahu’s statement was a factor in setting up the Friday call, the first in nearly a month.

With a two-state solution, the White House hopes at the same time to broker a normalization of relations between Israel and Saudi Arabia, a long-sought prize with broad economic and security implications for the region.

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Biden and Netanyahu also discussed efforts to secure the release of the remaining hostages held by Hamas and Israel’s shift to more targeted military operations, John Kirby, National Security Council spokesperson, said Friday at the White House press briefing.

Asked by VOA whether Biden believes Netanyahu can be persuaded to change his mind, Kirby said the president still believes in “the promise and possibility” of a two-state solution.

“He believes it’s going to take hard work and leadership,” Kirby said. “He’s willing to put his shoulder to the wheel for that eventual outcome.”

Kirby added that the U.S. welcomes Israel’s decision to permit the shipment of flour for the Palestinian people directly through Ashdod Port while the U.S. is separately working on options for more direct maritime delivery of assistance into Gaza.

“These are people, not numbers, and we are failing them,” Bahous said. “That failure, and the generational trauma inflicted on the Palestinian people over these 100 days and counting, will haunt us all for generations to come.”

It is also time, she said, for the immediate and unconditional release of all of the Israeli hostages.

Russia — hostages

The Russian Foreign Affairs Ministry said Friday it had held direct talks with a delegate from Hamas, which the U.S., U.K., EU, and other countries have designated as a terrorist group, urging them to release the hostages it is holding in the Gaza Strip, including three Russian nationals.

The ministry said in a statement that Mikhail Bogdanov, a deputy foreign minister, had received Hamas Politburo member Abu Marzouk.

“During the conversation, the focus was on the ongoing confrontation in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict zone against the backdrop of which the humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip has reached catastrophic proportions,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

“The Russian side stressed the need for the speedy release of civilians captured during the attacks of 7 October 2023 and held by Palestinian factions, including three Russian citizens — A. Kozlov, A. Lobanov, and A. Trufanov,” the statement read.

Israel has said it does not plan to reoccupy Gaza at the end of the war with Hamas but has refused to spell out its day-after plans for the territory.

Netanyahu said Israel has destroyed about two-thirds of Hamas’ fighting regiments in the Gaza Strip during more than three months of war and vowed to continue the war until Israel has achieved “complete victory.”

“There are two stages to the fighting. The first is destroying the Hamas regiments, those are their organized combat frameworks,” Netanyahu said.

“Up until now, 16 or 17 out of 24 [regiments] have been destroyed. After that, there is the [stage] of clearing the territory [of militants]. The first action is usually shorter. The second usually takes longer,” Netanyahu said. “Victory will take many more months, but we are determined to achieve it.”

The U.S. has for weeks pressed Israel to curtail its massive offensive in Gaza to sharply limit the number of civilian deaths in the narrow territory along the Mediterranean Sea.

Biden Downplays Disagreement With Netanyahu On Palestinian Statehood

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