Letters from an American - March 14, 2024
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March 14th, 2024.
This morning, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat of New York,
one of the highest-ranking Jewish officials in the U.S. government,
said Israelis need to call new elections to replace Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who, Schumer said, has lost his way
by allowing his political survival to take precedence over the best interests of Israel.
Schumer, who is a strong ally of Israel and who also blamed Hamas for the crisis in the Middle
East, warned that the deadly toll on civilians in Gaza under the policies of Netanyahu's government
is pushing support for Israel worldwide to historic lows.
Israel cannot survive if it becomes a pariah.
Netanyahu needs to hold his far-right coalition together
to escape the corruption trial in which he is currently at risk,
and that coalition wants continued attacks on Hamas. Netanyahu has announced that Israel's forces are planning
to invade the city of Rafah, where about 1.4 million Palestinians are sheltering,
despite President Joe Biden's warning that such an invasion must have a plan to protect civilians that was actually planned, prepared, and implementable.
Meanwhile, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is so bad that the U.S. and other countries are
conducting airdrops of essential relief. Airdrops are a poor substitute for land-based aid.
And Netanyahu's government has rejected the call of neighboring Arab states, the U.S., and the European Union for a real path to a Palestinian state,
instead trying to prevent such a state by pushing more settlements in the West Bank.
On a hot mic at the State of the Union address last Tuesday, Biden told Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Senator Michael Bennett, a Democrat of Colorado,
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Senator Michael Bennett, a Democrat of Colorado.
I told him, Bibi, you and I are going to have a come-to-Jesus meeting,
slang for a moment that precipitates a major change.
Netanyahu's far-right government is deeply unpopular in Israel. In January, only 15% of Israelis wanted him to keep his job after the war on Hamas ends.
And three days ago, the U.S. intelligence community assessed in its annual report on the threats facing the United States that distrust of Netanyahu's ability to rule has deepened and broadened across the public from its already high levels before the war.
And we expect large protests demanding his resignation and new elections.
It concluded, a different, more moderate government is a possibility. Centrist political rival Benny
Gantz has visited the U.S. and the U.K. recently. As a democracy, Israel has the right to choose its
own leaders, and we should let the chips fall where they may, Schumer said. But the important thing is that Israelis are given a choice.
Netanyahu has forged strong ties in the U.S. with Republicans. In 2015, he spoke before Congress at
the invitation of Republicans in an attempt to undermine then-President Barack Obama's
negotiations with Iran
to stop that country's development of nuclear weapons.
Today, Republicans slammed Schumer's speech.
House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, said,
We need to be standing with Israel.
We need to give our friends and allies our full support.
In Hungary today, the U.S.
ambassador launched a similar pushback against a far-right leader whose
personal interests are driving his country's policies. Today is the 25th
anniversary of Hungary's joining the North Atlantic Treaty Organization or
NATO. U.S. Ambassador David Pressman used the occasion to warn Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban that the United States has lost patience with his embrace of Russian President
Vladimir Putin, his undermining of support for Ukraine, and his open advocacy of Trump's return
to the White House. Pressman noted that the U.S. and Hungary have long historic ties, reaching all
the way back to the American Revolution and the influence of revolutionary leader Lajos Kossuth,
who is one of two foreign leaders whose busts are in the U.S. Capitol, on the defense of democracy
in the years before the Civil War. What unites these connections between our two nations is the shared longing of our peoples for liberty and democracy, Pressman said.
When Hungary joined NATO in 1999, Pressman noted,
Viktor Orban was prime minister, and he was proud of the country's democratic future
aligned with the transatlantic community of democracies.
Now, he said, Hungary's choices are increasingly isolating it from its friends and allies.
We cannot ignore it when the Speaker of Hungary's National Assembly
asserts that Putin's war in Ukraine is actually led by the United States, Pressman said.
We cannot ignore a sitting minister referring to the United States as a corpse
whose nails continue to grow. We can neither understand nor accept the prime minister
identifying the United States as a top adversary of our ally, Hungary, or his assertion that the
United States government is trying to overthrow the hungarian government literally to defeat him
while the hungarian government's wild rhetoric in state-controlled media may incite passion or
ignite an electoral base the choice to issue on a daily basis dangerously unhinged anti-american
messaging is a policy choice and it risks changing Hungary's relationship with America,
Pressman said. The ambassador called out Orban's systematic takeover of independent media,
the use of government power to provide favorable treatment for companies owned by party leaders or
their families, in-laws, or old friends,
and law defending a single party's effort to monopolize public discourse.
This is not something we expect from allies, Pressman said.
The U.S. seeks to engage through dialogue and is willing to speak honestly, he said, but he warned that the U.S. is ready to act in response to choices the government is making
hungary's allies are warning hungary of the dangers of its close and expanding relationship
with russia pressman said if this is hungary's policy choice and it has become increasingly
clear that it is with the foreign minister's sixth trip to Russia since Russia's invasion of Ukraine,
and with his next trip to Russia scheduled in two weeks,
following his engagement with Russia's foreign minister earlier this month,
and the prime minister's meeting with Vladimir Putin in China,
we will have to decide how best to protect our security interests,
which, as allies,
should be our collective security interests." Pressman called out Orban
for his open support for Trump.
Orban visited Trump at Mar-a-Lago last week and has repeatedly expressed his
hope that he will be returned to the White House, and his active participation
in U.S. partisan political events.
Orban is a darling of the far right
and has appeared at the Conservative Political Action Conference, or CPAC, more than once.
While Hungary attempts to wait out those it disagrees with,
whether in the United States or the European Union,
the rest of the world is moving forward, Pressman said. While the Orban government
may want to wait out the United States government, the United States will certainly not wait out the
Orban administration. While Hungary waits, we will act, he said. We want what polls consistently show
the vast majority of Hungarians want,
a close relationship between the United States and Hungary,
rooted in democratic values and shared security and prosperity.
Exactly what the prime minister said he wanted 25 years ago, he said,
and that is what we still want today.
The U.S. has pledged to defend member states in the family of democracies, Pressman said.
And while Hungary tied itself to those democracies 25 years ago,
this government's actions and rhetoric make it sound like it does not feel so firmly anchored.
The United States would not be acting as your ally
if we did not forthrightly express concern about the course Hungary is charting, through rough seas of its own choosing.
We anchored together 25 years ago as democratic allies. It remains our hope that we sail forward together as part of a stronger and now larger democratic alliance,
a choice that remains up to Hungary,
its government, and its people.
Letters from an American was produced
at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts,
recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.