Categories: Global

Awkward meeting looms for US’s Joe Biden and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu

UNITED NATIONS, United States (AFP)  : Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets US President Joe Biden on Wednesday for the first time since being re-elected, in what promises to be a tense encounter between the two leaders. Concerned by Netanyahu’s controversial judicial reforms, Biden has withheld an invite to the White House and the pair will instead meet on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly of New York.
They are also expected to discuss a potential deal to normalize ties between Israel and Saudi Arabia, which are both key US allies but share decades of bad blood.
White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said last week that one focus of the talks would be the “shared democratic values between the United States and Israel.”
Those values have looked anything but shared recently, with Democrat Biden describing Netanyahu’s hard-right government as “one of the most extremist” in Israeli history.
Relations between Netanyahu and the Biden administration have been rocky ever since the Israeli leader made his political comeback at the head of a coalition of hard-right and ultra-Orthodox parties in December.
Biden has strongly criticized Netanyahu’s bid to reform the judiciary, which opponents describe as a threat to democracy in Israel and a step toward authoritarianism.
Israeli artists and intellectuals including writer David Grossman recently wrote an open letter urging Biden not to meet Netanyahu – an issue for the Democratic president, who needs the liberal establishment onside ahead of elections next year.
In a seeming snub to Netanyahu, Biden in July hosted the Israeli president, Isaac Herzog, a political moderate, in the Oval Office.
There was even a squabble earlier this year after Netanyahu said he had been invited to the White House – but the White House then said merely that the pair would meet “in the United States.”
Ties have been further strained by the Israeli government’s expansion of Jewish settlements in occupied Palestinian territories.
But despite the tensions between Biden and Netanyahu, there has been no real sign of the United States loosening long-term support for the Jewish state, its key ally in the Middle East.
The White House’s Sullivan hinted as much, saying that Netanyahu and Biden would discuss a “vision for a more stable and prosperous and integrated region.”
The leaders would also “compare notes on effectively countering and deterring Iran,” another key topic for a US administration keen to counter Tehran’s regional presence and nuclear ambitions.
Netanyahu met tech tycoon Elon Musk on Monday, urging him to fight anti-Semitism on his X platform, formerly known as Twitter.

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Criminal gangs, profiteers thrive in Gaza as cash shortage worsens misery

CAIRO/GENEVA/BERLIN (Reuters): A shortage of banknotes is gripping Gaza, fueling criminal gangs and profiteering, after…

2 hours ago

Iran accuses France of ‘interfering’ over detained nationals

TEHRAN (AFP): Iran condemned as "interfering" Tuesday a French foreign ministry statement accusing it of…

2 hours ago

8 dead, at least 40 injured as farmworkers’ bus overturns in central Florida

FLORIDA (AP): A bus carrying farmworkers in central Florida overturned on Tuesday, killing eight people…

2 hours ago

Russia detains senior defence official on bribery charges

MOSCOW (AFP): A senior Russian defence official has been detained on bribery charges, investigators announced…

2 hours ago

Gov rejects Justice Babar Sattar’s claim of interference in judiciary

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: The Federal Government Tuesday rejected the claims of Islamabad High Court Judge…

4 hours ago

PM announces to visit AJK, emphasizes dialogue to resolve issues

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has announced to visit Azad Jammu and Kashmir…

4 hours ago

This website uses cookies.