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Netanyahu at AIPAC: Wrong to hold Israel to standards no one else is held to

The international community must stop applying double standards when it comes to IDF actions during the Israel-Hamas war, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) on Tuesday in a virtual address. 

“You can not say you support Israel’s goal of destroying Hamas and then oppose Israel when it takes the action necessary to achieve that goal,” Netanyahu stated.

“You can not say that you oppose Hamas’s strategy of using civilians as human shields and then blame Israel for the civilian casualties that result from this Hamas cynical strategy.

“For Israel, every civilian death is a tragedy. For Hamas, every civilian death is a strategy,” he said. 

“It is wrong and immoral to hold Israel to a standard for avoiding civilian casualties that no other country on earth is held to,” he stated.

 PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the AIPAC Policy Conference in Washington, in 2018. (credit: HAIM ZACH/GPO)
PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the AIPAC Policy Conference in Washington, in 2018. (credit: HAIM ZACH/GPO)

Growing tension between Netanyahu’s government and Biden administartion

Netanyahu spoke amid growing tension between his government and the Biden administration over Israel’s policies concerning the Gaza war.

The US had hoped to finalize a six-week pause to the war, that would allow for the release of some 40 out of the remaining 134 hostages held in Gaza and to expand the absence of those hostilities into a deal for a permanent ceasefire.

Instead, the continuation of the war into the holy month of Ramadan, which began on Sunday night Ramadan, has deepened the humanitarian crisis in the enclave and increased the risk that combat in Gaza could spark a regional war.

The international community has increasingly pressed Israel to halt the war, even though it has not achieved its goal of destroying Hamas, a goal many countries, including the United States, support.

The US and the international community are concerned, in particular, about the pending Israeli military operation into Rafah in southern Gaza, which is considered to be the last Hamas stronghold. 

It has also been concerned by Hamas assertions that over 31,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza war-related violence. Israel has said that over 13,000 of the fatalities are combatants.

Before the Gaza war, in speaking of modern-day conflicts, the UN had said that 90% of wartime casualties are civilian.

US National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby, however, has repeatedly said that one civilian casualty is unacceptable, and United Nations experts have spoken of an unusually high casualty count in this war.

Those speaking of fatalities often speak of the 31,000 as if it is a solely civilian count and not one that also includes combatants.

US President Joe Biden, in his Ramadan message on Sunday, said that more than 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, most of them civilians, including thousands of children. 

Netanyahu defended Israel’s casualty record in his AIPAC speech, explaining that the IDF has “taken measures to minimize civilian casualties that no other army has taken in history. Just ask Colonel John Spencer, a world expert on urban warfare, who is in charge of urban warfare at West Point. We have taken measures to minimize civilian casualties that no other army has taken in history.”

JPost

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