Blinken delivers strong US criticism to Israel
Antony Blinken has delivered some of the Biden administration’s strongest public criticism yet of Israel’s conduct of the war in Gaza.
The US secretary of state said Israeli tactics have meant “a horrible loss of life of innocent civilians” but failed to neutralise Ham as leaders and fighters and could drive a lasting ins urgency.
In two TV interviews, Mr Blinken underscored that the United States believes Israeli forces should “get out of Gaza”, but is also waiting to see credibleplans from israel for security and governance in the territory after the war.
Hamas has re-emerged in parts of Gaza, Mr Blinken said, and “heavy action” by Israeli forces in the southern city of Rafah risks leaving America’s closest Middle East ally “holding the bag on an enduring insurgency”.
He said the US has worked with Arab countries and others for weeks on developing“credible plans for security, for governance, for rebuilding” in gaza, but “we haven’t seen that come from Israel... We need to see that, too”.
Mr Blinken also said that as Israel pushes deeper in Rafah in the south, a military operation may “have some initial success” but risks “terrible harm” to the population without solving a problem “that both of us want to solve, which is making sure Hamas cannot again govern Gaza”.
More than a million Palestinians have crowded into Rafah in the hopes of refuge as Israel's offensive pushed across Gaza.
Israel has said the city also hosts four battalions of Hamas fighters. Israel's conduct of the war, Mr Blinken said, has put the country “on the trajectory, potentially, to inherit an insurgency with many armed Hamas left or, if it leaves, a vacuum filled by chaos, filled by anarchy, and probably refilled by Hamas. We’ve been talking to them about a much better way of getting an enduring result, enduring security”.
Mr blink en also echoed, for the first time publicly by a US official, the findings of a new Biden administration report to Congress on Friday that said Israel’s use of Us-provided weapons in Gaza likely violated international humanitarian law.
The report also said wartime conditions prevented american officials from determining that for certain in specific air strikes.
“When it comes to the use of weapons, concerns about incidents where given the totality of the damage that's been done to children, women, men, it was reasonable to assess that, in certain instances, Israel acted in ways that are not consistent with international humanitarian law,” Mr Blinken said.
He cited “the horrible loss of life of innocent civilians”.
Mr Blinken spoke to Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant on Sunday, reiterating the longstanding US opposition to what is now the growing israeli offensive in Rafah, given the toll on civilians there, according to the State Department's recounting of the call.
Mr Blinken urged Mr Gallant to allow humanitarian workers to bring aid into Gaza and distribute it.
Israel’s offensive into Rafah has shut down one of the two main border crossings into the territory for a week, and most operations have stopped at the other one after it was targeted by a Hamas rocket attack.