Biden, Netanyahu to discuss Saudi normalization, Iran

Steve Holland

Reuters  /  September 20, 2023

WASHINGTON – U.S. President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday will hold their first face-to-face talks since Netanyahu took power in December, with topics expected to include a potential Israel-Saudi normalization deal and Iran.

Biden had held off extending an invitation to Netanyahu out of concern about a judicial overhaul that curbs the power of judges undertaken by his right-wing government as well as Israel’s expansion of settlements on the occupied West Bank.

Instead of meeting at the White House – Netanyahu’s preferred venue – the two leaders ended up arranging their talks on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly in New York.

U.S. officials expect the judicial overhaul to come up in their conversations, as well as efforts to counter Iran’s nuclear program and the possibility of what would be a major development – a normalization of Israel-Saudi relations.

Netanyahu had expected an earlier U.S. visit given his long history of dealing with American presidents, but Biden had resisted. Netanyahu did not get a meeting in the early months of the Biden White House in 2021 and was then ousted from power. He returned to power last December.

Instead, Biden welcomed Israeli President Isaac Herzog, a largely ceremonial post, to the White House in July to mark the 75th anniversary of Israel’s founding.

The United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia have been discussing a potential deal in which the Israelis and the Saudis would normalize diplomatic relations and Washington and Riyadh would agree on a defense pact, but talks still have far to go.

David Makovsky, a long-time Middle East watcher at the [AIPAC-linked] Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP), noted in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, that the meeting “will occur 265 days after Netanyahu took office, the longest such gap since 1964.”

“The Saudi deal’s enormous potential has left Biden & Netanyahu little choice but to meet despite differences,” he said.

U.S. officials have also not ruled out an eventual White House meeting between Biden and Netanyahu.

The Biden administration is calculating that the U.S. could reap big rewards from such a mega-deal if it can overcome steep obstacles.

“We’ve had decades of conflict in the Middle East. To bring these two countries together would have a powerful effect in stabilizing the region,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told ABC News‘ “Good Morning America” program, noting challenges remain to reach an agreement.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan earlier this month said while there are “elements of a pathway to normalization” on the table, there was no framework or terms ready to be signed.

“There is still work to do,” Sullivan told reporters on September 7.

Reporting By Steve Holland; additional reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Leslie Adler

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Israeli-Palestinian violence surges ahead of Netanyahu-Biden meeting

Reuters  /  September 20, 2023   

JENIN, West Bank – Israeli troops killed a 19-year-old Palestinian during a raid in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, medics and residents said, as violence surged ahead of a first meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President Joe Biden.

Security in the West Bank, among areas where Palestinians seek statehood, has deteriorated amid an almost decade-old impasse in U.S.-sponsored peacemaking, the rise of Netanyahu’s hard-right government and an entrenchment of Islamist militants.

The Palestinian killed near the town of Jericho was shot as troops faced off with stone-throwers, according to residents, though his family said he had not taken part. He was the sixth Palestinian killed in confrontations with Israel since Tuesday.

The army said it carried out the raid to arrest suspected militants, and fired on several bomb-throwing Palestinians, hitting one of them. There was no word of Israeli casualties.

Since regaining power last December at the head of a religious-nationalist coalition, Netanyahu’s relations with Biden have been strained. Israel’s U.S. ally is troubled by his judicial overhaul plans and Jewish settlement of the West Bank.

Not yet invited to Biden’s White House, Netanyahu will meet the president on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly.

In his speech to the forum on Tuesday, Biden promoted U.S. efforts to normalize relations between Israel and its Arab neighbours. Biden also said his administration “continue(s) to work tirelessly to support a just and lasting peace between… the Israelis and Palestinians — two states for two people”.