Biden meets Netanyahu on fringes of UN talks after months of delay

US president voiced gentle criticism at Netanyahu’s efforts to reduce power of Israel’s supreme court and of Israeli settlement expansion in the West Bank

Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US president Joe Biden at a hotel near the United Nations in New York on Wednesday. Photograph: Doug Mills/The New York Times
Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US president Joe Biden at a hotel near the United Nations in New York on Wednesday. Photograph: Doug Mills/The New York Times

US president Joe Biden met Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu on Wednesday at a hotel near the United Nations, bestowing him with a mixture of encouragement and criticism that both soothed and aggravated months-long tensions between the two men.

In granting Mr Netanyahu an audience, Mr Biden provided the embattled Israeli leader with a small public relations victory: it was their first in-person encounter since Mr Netanyahu returned to office in December, and it ended the US president’s informal moratorium on contact with the prime minister.

Mr Biden also hinted that Mr Netanyahu might be invited to a more formal meeting at the White House within months – a major boost for the Israeli leader. “I hope we will see each other in Washington by the end of the year,” the president said.

Israeli prime ministers are typically welcomed at the Oval Office within months of their election but Mr Netanyahu has yet to receive an invitation.

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Mr Biden’s other comments before the meeting showed that the relationship still remains thorny. The president voiced gentle criticism at Mr Netanyahu’s efforts to reduce the power of Israel’s supreme court, a contentious move that has set off one of the worst domestic crises in Israeli history.

He also pushed him to preserve the possibility of creating a Palestinian state, implicitly criticising several recent moves by Mr Netanyahu’s government to entrench Israeli control of the West Bank.

“Today we’re going to discuss some of the hard issues – upholding democratic values that lie at the heart of our partnership, including checks and balances in our systems, and preserving the path to a negotiated two-state solution,” Mr Biden said at the start of the meeting.

But he also offered Mr Netanyahu some encouragement, promising to block Iranian efforts to secure a nuclear weapon and to continue to help normalise ties between Israel and Saudi Arabia. “Even when we have our differences my commitment to Israel is ironclad,” Mr Biden said.

The rest of the meeting was held in private. Mr Biden was expected to voice concerns about Israeli settlement expansion in the West Bank as well as Mr Netanyahu’s judicial overhaul, which has set off nine months of mass protests, dented his polling numbers at home and attracted unusual criticism abroad, in particular from Mr Biden himself.

Mr Biden has publicly challenged the prime minister’s efforts to overhaul Israel’s supreme court in the wake of corruption investigations against him.

Though the two leaders have worked together for decades and describe each other as friends, Mr Biden has described Mr Netanyahu’s governing coalition as “one of the most extremist” in Israeli history.

Analysts say a photograph with the US president offers Mr Netanyahu an opportunity to build a new narrative at home: to present himself as a statesman, remind Israelis of his extensive diplomatic experience and suggest that the recent friction with Mr Biden has ebbed.

But the circumstances of the meeting also provided fodder for Mr Netanyahu’s opponents, hundreds of whom protested outside the hotel, chanting against the prime minister and criticising Mr Biden for meeting him.

– New York Times