President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are speaking on Thursday for the first time since Israel’s deadly strike on a convoy of aid workers in Gaza, according to a US official.
Israel has acknowledged responsibility for the strikes but said the convoy was not targeted and the workers’ deaths were not intentional. The country continues to investigate the circumstances surrounding the killings.
The strikes, which killed seven workers with the World Central Kitchen – including a dual US-Canadian citizen – have set off a furor inside the Biden White House even as the administration’s public support for Israel remains unwavering.
In a statement on Tuesday reacting to the strikes, Biden explicitly blamed Israel for failing to protect aid workers and civilians in Gaza, saying he was outraged by the deaths of the World Central Kitchen workers and adding: “Incidents like yesterday’s simply should not happen.”
But the strikes still appear to have not threatened the relationship between Israel and the United States – its largest and most important ally. Biden is set to green light an $18 billion sale of fighter jets from the United States and Israel and the administration recently authorized the transfer to Israel of over 1,000 500-pound bombs and over 1,000 small-diameter bombs, according to three people familiar with the matter.
The president has called for a temporary ceasefire that includes the release of hostages held by Hamas, and has repeatedly said he does not want Israel to undertake a ground invasion of Rafah in southern Gaza, where scores of displaced Gazans have sought shelter, but he has so far stopped short of calling for a permanent ceasefire.
Biden’s hesitance to do so is increasingly out of step with the actions and public…
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