Even if Israel turns a deaf ear to UN’s ceasefire vote, it won’t have missed its biggest ally’s shift in stance

US News

On Gaza, the hard numbers reflect a hardening of the world view.

Of 193 member states in the United Nations General Assembly, 153 supported a ceasefire in Gaza.

It’s a big increase on the last time a similar vote was taken in October – a measure of how global opinion is trending with time.

A vote in New York that isn’t legally binding doesn’t change anything on the ground in Gaza, of course.

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Gaza: UN votes for ceasefire resolution

The significance is in the symbolism. A growing majority view in favour of ceasefire increases pressure on the minority.

Countries like the United States, which voted against, and the United Kingdom, which abstained, are left increasingly isolated.

If Israel turned a deaf ear to the UN vote, it won’t have missed the voice of its biggest ally.

The United States has shuffled in its stance over the course of this conflict, amid a growing international outcry.

People search through the rubble of damaged buildings following an Israeli air strike on Palestinian houses in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip
Image:
Israeli airstrikes have devastated huge swathes of the Gaza Strip

The US president appeared to shuffle further in pointed remarks hours before Tuesday’s vote.

In an off-camera briefing, referring to support enjoyed by Israel, Joe Biden said it was “starting to lose that support by the indiscriminate bombing that takes place”.

The president raised concerns that he had with the Israeli government, saying Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “has to change this government”.

“This government in Israel is making it very difficult,” Biden said.

He said that Israel “can’t say no” to a Palestinian state, adding: “We have an opportunity to begin to unite the region… and they still want to do it.

“But we have to make sure that Bibi [Netanyahu] understands that he’s got to make some moves to strengthen… you cannot say no Palestinian state… that’s going to be the hard part.”

Biden went as far as to highlight Israel’s far-right national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir when he spoke of “the most conservative government in Israel’s history”.

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US President Joe Biden
Image:
President Biden

For his part, Netanyahu said in a statement on Tuesday that Israel had received “full backing” from the US for its ground incursion into Gaza and that Washington had blocked “international pressure to stop the war”.

But, he added: “There is disagreement about ‘the day after Hamas’ and I hope that we will reach agreement here as
well.”

Differences on a long-term plan for Gaza aren’t new between the United States and Israel, nor between Biden and Netanyahu.

The difference is in the candid nature of Biden’s remarks and a stark willingness to highlight distance between the pair and their vision – more so than at any point during the conflict.

A call for a change in government is no vote of confidence – quite the opposite.

It exposes a distinct divergence between wartime allies that strains unity going forward.

Increased isolation, as measured by the United Nations, won’t ease the pressure.

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