US President Joe Biden's reelection worries are influencing his Middle East policies, potentially posing risks to Israel, according to American political consultant and lobbyist Ralph Reed.
"There's an appearance that US foreign policy, and US policy toward Israel and the Middle East, is being influenced by domestic political consideration," Reed said this week during an interview at the King David Hotel. He said this is both in the rhetoric that the Biden administration is using, such as calling Israel's actions in Gaza "over the top," or in its pressuring Israel to try to bring about a ceasefire for a hostage deal the country cannot accept.
"It's amazing how much of [Secretary of State Antony] Blinken's time and energy is being devoted to this when it ought to be devoted to calling on other Arab states to tell Hamas to surrender and stop fighting," Reed continued. "I think that even the appearance that political considerations with regard to [Biden's] reelection are driving some of this is very concerning."
Reed, the first executive director of the Christian Coalition and the founder of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, was in Israel this week on a solidarity mission organized by the Israel Heritage Foundation. He toured the wreckage of southern Israel and met with top political officials.
Who is Reed backing in the next election?
Reed told The Jerusalem Post that he is supporting Donald Trump, who is poised to secure the Republican nomination to challenge Biden in the upcoming election, because “he’s the most pro-life president in my lifetime and he’s the most pro-Israel president in my lifetime.”The former president has made negative comments about Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel since he left the White House, including saying Netanyahu was caught unprepared by Hamas’s attack and accusing the prime minister of disloyalty. However, Reed said that if reelected, “Trump would be as pro-Israel in a second term.”“Trump turned the screws on Iran,” Reed said, noting that the former president had Iran down to around 300,000 barrels per day or less in crude oil exports by June 2019 from the more than 2.5 million barrels the country shipped in April 2018, the month before Trump withdrew the United States from the nuclear deal.
He said under Trump, the Houthis were listed as a terrorist organization, and the country defunded the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), all policies that Biden reversed.Trump has said that the Israel-Hamas conflict would have been prevented under his presidency. While Reed didn’t explicitly agree, he did suggest that Hamas exploited Biden’s support of Iran and his perceived weak foreign policies.
“I think it is difficult to disconnect a projection of strategic weakness on the part of the United States from bad actions being taken by bad actors, and that would be the case with [Russian President Vladmir] Putin going into Ukraine, Iranian-funded militias attacking US forces 160 times and firing missiles with impunity at US naval vessels,” and when it comes to Hamas’s murderous actions on October 7, Reed said.“If every other sentence out of your mouth is, ‘We don’t want war with Iran,’ then don’t be surprised if they do whatever they want to do,” he continued. “Regardless of where you stand on Israel’s prosecution of the war in Gaza with Hamas, it is enormously destabilizing to the region – and not just to the region but to the entire world.”Reed emphasized to the Post that Israel deserves unequivocal support in concluding its conflict with Hamas and addressing potential threats from Hezbollah in the North and unrest in the West Bank.He said he was in the country representing the 2.7 million members of his Faith and Freedom Coalition and, more broadly, the 70 million to 80 million Evangelicals in the United States who support Israel.“We want the government of Israel, and the people of Israel, to have the support they need to win this war,” Reed said, defining victory as defeating Hamas and destroying its infrastructure, demilitarizing Gaza and deradicalizing the local population.
Reed spoke to the Post a week after new data was published by Prof. Motti Inbari of the University of North Carolina at Pembroke and Dr. Kirill Bumin of Boston University showed that support for Israel among young Evangelicals under the age of 30 has plummeted by over 50% in just three years, posing a potential threat to American backing for the Jewish State.