President Joe Biden said he looks forward to working with Israel’s new government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but suggested the United States could “oppose” certain policies related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Calling the veteran leader “my friend for decades,” Biden warned in a statement Thursday that Washington “will continue to … oppose policies that endanger [two-state solution] viability or contradict our mutual interests and values.”
NETANYAHU UNVEILS NEW COALITION GOVERNMENT, USHERING IN RETURN TO PRIME MINISTERSHIP
Netanyahu was sworn in for a sixth term as Israel’s prime minister on Thursday at the head of a hard-right Cabinet that has promised to expand Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
Biden has said he supports a two-state solution to the conflict and urged a “lasting negotiated peace between the State of Israel and the Palestinian people” during a visit to the Middle East this summer. Biden later invoked his Irish Catholic background to compare Irish Catholics living under British rule to the plight of the Palestinians during a visit to a hospital in East Jerusalem.
In July, the president raised concerns over settlement expansion with Israeli leaders before his visit to the Palestinian territories. Yet Biden has also charged that some Democrats are “wrong” for their position on the conflict.
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U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) told Netanyahu in October that forming a government with far-right members could harm U.S.-Israel ties, according to Axios.
Asked about the report, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the U.S. was “confident that no matter who the Israeli people elect, we’re going to be able to work with them,” and noted “an awful lot of shared challenges.”