In the Gaza crisis, Joe Biden has demonstrated unwavering composure

In the Gaza crisis, Joe Biden has demonstrated unwavering composure

Joe ⁢Biden ‍has shown a steady hand in the Gaza ⁣crisis

Joe Biden has a temper. He vents it sometimes ‍on aides when he ⁤is unhappy with their work, and occasionally even on voters who have the nerve to​ criticise him.​ But when it ‌comes to building ⁣relationships to achieve his goals over the long term, whether with a ⁣wayward legislator or an⁤ oppositional ​foreign leader, Mr Biden has long demonstrated⁤ unusual patience and forbearance.

So it was in 2010 when, as Barack Obama’s vice-president, he landed in Israel⁢ only to be ‌blindsided by an announcement ⁢from the government of ⁤Binyamin Netanyahu that, contrary ⁣to⁣ the ‌wishes of the Americans, it intended⁤ to expand Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem.⁤ This seemed a deliberate ⁢humiliation, and some of President Obama’s aides thought Mr Biden should turn around​ and head home in protest. But Mr Biden‌ had begun ​developing a relationship with ‍Mr Netanyahu in the 1980s, when he arrived⁤ in Washington to serve at the Israeli embassy, and the ⁤vice-president ​had​ his own ideas of how to manage matters.

Mr Biden issued a statement ‍criticising the move,⁤ then put together a joint working group with Mr⁤ Netanyahu to contain the fallout. Then he and his wife Jill went​ to dinner with ⁤the Netanyahus. According ​to Mr Netanyahu’s own grateful account, Mr Biden spoke that night about deeply personal matters, about how hard it had ⁤been ‌to overcome​ the​ deaths​ of his first wife and their daughter in a car crash. Mr‌ Biden later gave the ‍prime minister a photograph, scrawling a message ‌on it that⁢ might serve as an epigram for much of the ⁤US-Israel relationship: “Bibi, I don’t agree with a‍ damn thing you say, ‌but I love ya.”

2023-10-18 13:54:56
Original from​ www.economist.com

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