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NY Post
New York Post
19 Jul 2023


NextImg:Biden’s Bibi hatred endangers national security

The 75th anniversary of the strong, historically unbreakable bond between the United States and Israel is being celebrated this year.

Unfortunately, the occasion is marred by President Joe Biden’s personal animus towards Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which is weakening our relationship with the only democracy in the Middle East.

Biden snubbed Netanyahu by instead inviting President Isaac Herzog, Israel’s head of state, who lacks executive power, to an official state visit.

Almost invariably in the modern era, state visits are held with the head of government, not the head of state.

The last time the exception happened was 2007, when President George W. Bush hosted Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip.

Unlike in 2007, this decision was not out of reverence but politics. 

Biden despises Israel’s conservative government.

He has criticized the Netanyahu government as “the most extreme” in his lifetime and declared it is “part of the problem” in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 

The president’s comments stem from two primary issues: Israeli Supreme Court changes and the latest Iran negotiations.

Biden snubbed Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (pictured) by inviting Israel’s head of state, Isaac Herzog to an official state visit.
AFP via Getty Images

Biden’s doomsday narrative about Israeli judicial reform is disingenuous and deceitful.

Netanyahu and his coalition are working to bring Israel’s judicial system more in line with the United States’ system, something the president should support.

In the United States, our elected officials nominate and confirm Supreme Court justices, ensuring some accountability.

Netanyahu and his coalition are working to make Israel's judicial system more similar to the United States.

Netanyahu and his coalition are working to make Israel’s judicial system more similar to the United States.
Getty Images

In Israel, bureaucrats make up the majority of the judicial selection committee. They can ignore the will of the people entirely in their own self-benefiting cycle of bureaucracy.

And, unlike in America, Israeli judges can use a “reasonableness” standard, whereby they can arbitrarily scrap laws if they deem them “unreasonable.”

Reasonableness is inherently a debatable and political issue, and in Israel, this political issue is being decided by bureaucrats with no accountability to the people.

Despite Netanyahu’s reforms being common sense, Biden insisted Israel “cannot continue down this road.”

US Ambassador Tom Nides said this plan is “going off the rails” and told Netanyahu he must “pump the brakes.” 

Netanyahu is not the extremist here — Biden is.

Nides said Netanyahu's plan is "going off the rails."

Nides said Netanyahu’s plan is “going off the rails.”
REUTERS

The president’s second issue is Netanyahu’s staunch opposition to a new “less for more” Iran deal.

The Biden administration is clinging to the past, holding on to the belief that the Iran nuclear deal can be revived. 

It is willing to give up nearly anything for any small concessions from Iran — and Iran knows it.

Iran has only grown more emboldened under the Biden administration.

Under President Donald Trump, Iran was at roughly 5% uranium enrichment, compared to the current 83.7% enriched uranium under Biden’s policies.

That’s 6.3 percentage points away from weapons-grade material and 24 times more than what the 2015 Iran deal allowed!

The notion that the Biden administration can negotiate a new deal, especially when Iran did not even comply with the original deal, is ludicrous.

Thank goodness Netanyahu is fighting for both Israeli and American national-security interests when he criticizes and opposes any new deal.

Netanyahu is the only responsible actor right now in our bilateral relationship.

Let me be clear: Any tensions between the United States and Israel are solely the fault of President Biden.

He must immediately reverse course and work to strengthen our relations with Israel, not weaken them.

He should end any attempts to re-enter the Iran deal or negotiate a new deal; stop interfering in domestic Israeli political issues; and, as a show of good faith, invite Prime Minister Netanyahu for a state visit on a specific date — not just say he’s welcome to come to the United States in months.

Instead of turning his back on our greatest ally in the Middle East for the past 75 years, Biden should be looking to strengthen this relationship.

He must stop disparaging Netanyahu and instead work with him to expand on the Abraham Accords that brought historic change to the region. 

Then, and only then, could we realize Middle East peace and another 75 years of strong bilateral relations between our two democracies and beacons of freedom.

Claudia Tenney represents New York’s 24th Congressional District.