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Netanyahu apologizes to Qatar at White House meeting

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(JNS) Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House on Monday amid predictions that the leaders might announce a proposal for ending the war in Gaza.

During the meeting, Netanyahu and Trump called Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, who is also Qatar’s foreign affairs minister, and the Israeli premier apologized for violating the Gulf state’s sovereignty when Israel killed five Hamas members and a Qatari security guard in a Sept. 9 airstrike in Doha.

“Prime Minister Netanyahu expressed his deep regret that Israel’s missile strike against Hamas targets in Qatar unintentionally killed a Qatari serviceman,” per a White House readout of the call. “He further expressed regret that, in targeting Hamas leadership during hostage negotiations, Israel violated Qatari sovereignty and affirmed that Israel will not conduct such an attack again in the future.”

The three leaders agreed to establish a “trilateral mechanism to enhance coordination, improve communication, resolve mutual grievances and strengthen collective efforts to prevent threats,” the White House said.

The three also “discussed a proposal for ending the war in Gaza,” per the White House, but it wasn’t clear from the U.S. readout if the three leaders agreed to a proposal during the call.

After the apology was reported, Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israel’s minister of national security, stated in Hebrew that the airstrike was “important, just and supremely moral.”

“Whoever sends monsters to burn babies, rape women and abduct elderly women must know that there is no place in the world where he is safe,” he stated. “It is time to tell the world the truth: Qatar is a state that supports terrorism, funds terrorism and incites terrorism.”

Bezalel Smotrich, Israeli finance minister, called Netanyahu’s apology to Qatar “groveling” and a “disgrace” and stated, in Hebrew, that it coincided with the anniversary of the 1938 Munich agreement with Adolf Hitler.

Ben-Gvir, Smotrich and other members of Netanyahu’s narrowly-held coalition in the Knesset have suggested that they would either oppose a deal to end the war without total victory or have set conditions on the kind of deal to which they would agree.

Those threats to oppose a deal have raised the prospect that Netanyahu’s government could collapse, but opposition leader Yair Lapid said on Saturday that he had informed Washington that he would back the government in the event of a deal.

“Netanyahu has a safety net from me for a hostage deal and ending the war,” Lapid stated in Hebrew. “It has a majority in the Knesset and a majority in the country.”

Ahead of the White House meeting on Monday, some U.S. politicians suggested that they were also divided over a potential deal.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) wrote that he opposed Israel ending military operations if “Hamas is not eliminated forever.”

Speaking in favor of a ceasefire, seven Senate Democrats, including Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), stated that Trump should press Netanyahu to “end the war in Gaza, bring home the hostages, surge humanitarian aid to Gaza, take the dangerous step of annexation off the table and begin the path to lasting peace.”

Trump and Netanyahu are expected to hold a joint press conference later on Tuesday.

1 COMMENT

  1. This is probably unnecessary and therefore regrettable. Ben-Gvir and Smotrich are correct. Qatar is every bit as bad and worse as the Muslim monsters it has funded and protected. Perhaps there is some horse trading going on behind the scenes which might explain what Netanyahu is doing, but on its face it is lamentable.

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