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美国魔杖 在加沙失灵了

(2024-02-25 08:18:37) 下一个

国际识局:超级大国不作为!美国“魔杖”在加沙失灵了? 

2024-02-24  发布于:北京市

中新网2月23日电 综合报道,美国日前再次否决安理会关于加沙冲突的决议草案,拒绝国际社会关于立即实现停火的要求,引发外界诸多批评。外媒认为,美国在加沙问题上“不作为”,与世界上推动和平解决加沙冲突的努力背道而驰,把自己逼入了被世界孤立且危险的处境。同时也令外界质疑,美国作为超级大国是否尽到了其应尽的责任。

当地时间2023年12月27日,以色列南部与加沙边界附近浓烟滚滚。

“超级大国不作为” 美国“魔杖”失灵了?

美国在加沙停火问题上多次动用否决权,被外界视为对该地区日益恶化的人道主义悲剧的无视。阿联酋《国民报》直言不讳地评论称,华盛顿拒绝呼吁加沙永久停火之举,“正在削弱美国在全球舞台上的信誉”。还指出,美国拒绝向以色列施压以停止加沙战火,让人感觉越来越像是“在放弃责任”。美国显然仍然是当今时代的强大力量,但它未能呼吁停火“令人震惊”。

实际上,美国在加沙问题上“立场顽固”,尽管拜登表示以色列在加沙的行动“过分”,但他对以色列“坚定不移”的支持从未改变过。

《南华早报》也认为,今天,美国仍然是以色列在加沙军事行动的“不可或缺”的支持者,却对巨大的人道主义灾难选择“视而不见”。

该报分析称,美国日益明显的双重标准正在削弱其信誉和影响力。

据美国《时代》周刊报道,美国国务院发言人米勒在近期一次新闻发布会上表示:“我想说的是,我认为有时人们假装美国有一根魔杖,它可以指挥世界上的任何局势,使世界上的任何局势完全按照我们希望的方式发展,但事实并非如此。”

“魔杖”言论一出,立即遭到了记者的反驳。有记者对美国发出了灵魂拷问:如果数十亿美元的军事援助不是“魔杖”,那什么才是呢?

“一切都是美国的错” 落入孤立危险境地

“那里发生的一切,都是美国的过错。”俄罗斯联邦安全会议副主席梅德韦杰夫在谈到当前中东局势恶化时如是评论道。

俄罗斯卫星通讯社援引梅德韦杰夫的话称,这一地区危机调解的控制权很大程度上是在美国手里。“以色列政府的决策能有多大的自主权?他们严重依赖美国的财政和军事援助,当然不能自主。”

近期,美国正因其对以色列的支持而受到国内外越来越多的批评。美国《纽约时报》发文称,国际社会的强烈反应凸显出,美国在强力支持以色列方面的孤立状态。

《华盛顿邮报》报道称,21日在巴西举行的为期两天的二十国集团外长会议上,美国反对加沙立即停火的立场,一再受到批评,这是美国在这一问题上受到孤立的又一力证。

巴西外交部长维埃拉在会议开始时,谴责美国的“这种不作为的状态导致了无辜者的生命损失”,批评美国为以色列提供了政治掩护以及价值数十亿美元的炸弹和军事装备。

美国昆西负责任治国研究所援引专家的分析称,“美国拒绝利用其影响力来制止以色列对加沙平民的屠杀,造成的损害甚至可能比伊拉克战争还要严重。同时,已有政府官员经警告称,这场战争将加剧恐怖主义。”

在本轮巴以冲突爆发前期,美国联邦调查局局长就曾告诉美国会,“多个外国恐怖组织呼吁对美国人和西方国家发动袭击”,“中东持续的战争使在美国境内的美国人遭受袭击的威胁上升到了一个高度”。

What Gaza Reveals About the Limits of American Power

https://time.com/6696023/biden-gaza-israel-us/

President Biden Responds To Special Counsel's Report On Handling Of Classified Material

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House on February 8, 2024 in Washington, DC.

BY YASMEEN SERHAN  

In the longstanding U.S.-Israel alliance, the former has always been regarded as the more senior partner. The U.S., after all, is an economic and military powerhouse. It’s the biggest supplier of military aid to Israel, providing $3.8 billion in assistance per year. It also acts as Israel’s chief defender at international forums such as the U.N. Security Council, where Washington routinely uses its veto power to block resolutions critical of Israel.

While this dynamic has earned the U.S. the designation of being Israel’s closest ally, it hasn’t always worked to its own interests in the region. Growing frustration within the Biden administration over the Israeli government’s handling of its months-long war to root out Hamas from Gaza has spilled into public view in recent weeks, with reports of President Biden privately referring to his Israeli counterpart Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as an “asshole” whose handling of the war he has been publicly derided as being “over the top.” 

But despite Washington’s considerable leverage on Israel, the Biden administration has so far proven itself seemingly unable, or unwilling, to wield it—a reality that hasn’t gone unnoticed at home or abroad. Calls to introduce conditions on U.S. aid to Israel have grown within Congress. Some U.S. allies have urged Washington to do the same.

Read More: What to Know About Israel’s Impending Offensive in Rafah

“When the United States of America stands up and says something publicly, it matters,” State Department Spokesperson Matthew Miller told reporters on Monday in response to a question by the Associated Press’s Matt Lee, who asked how the U.S. has used its leverage beyond simply “wagging its finger.” “We have seen the government of Israel respond to it—not always in the way we want, not always to the degree or the level that we want,” Miller continued.“But our interventions, we believe, have had an impact.”

That hasn’t always borne out. Public pronouncements by U.S. officials about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza (which Blinken referenced when he told Israeli leaders that Hamas’s deadly Oct. 7th attack “cannot be a license to dehumanize others”) or the mounting civilian death toll (Biden warned Israel against going forward with its planned invasion of Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah absent a “credible and executable plan” for protecting the Palestinian population sheltering there) haven’t been met with notable shifts in Israel’s strategy. And while the administration has pointed to an increase in humanitarian aid as evidence of its impact, critics argue that it isn’t nearly enough to meet the needs of the enclave as it faces mass starvation. Indeed, an effort as seemingly straightforward as securing the delivery of a U.S.-funded flour shipment to Gaza—a commitment that Netanyahu reportedly made to Biden personally—was ultimately scuppered by Netanyahu’s ultranationalist coalition partners. 

“It is frankly preposterous that we are haggling over bags of flour,” says Matt Duss, the executive vice president of the Center for International Policy and a former chief foreign policy advisor to Sen. Bernie Sanders, one of the most vocal proponents of conditioning U.S. aid to Israel. “This is not something the United States should have to haggle with a small partner state like Israel over considering the enormous amount of support that we give them and the enormous reliance on us that they have.”

Longtime observers of Biden say his apparent deference to his Israeli counterpart is a feature, not a bug, of his approach to U.S.-Israel relations. Unlike his former boss President Obama, who openly sparred with Netanyahu over Israeli settlement expansion and its implications for U.S.-led peace efforts, Biden has long been unwavering in his support for Israel and its government, even going so far as to cultivate a reputation for doing more than any other Obama administration official to shield the Israeli leader from diplomatic pressure. As president, Biden has largely continued with that approach—one that is informed as much by his longstanding affinity for Israel as it is by his own agreeable political style.

“He was never the kind of guy who likes to air his disagreements in public,” says Jonah Blank, a former foreign policy advisor to Biden during his time in the Senate. “He feels like you’re much more effective if you are publicly as cordial as you can be and deliver the tough news in private..”

While the Biden administration argues that this approach has reaped some results in terms of increasing humanitarian assistance and reducing civilian casualties, it has also conceded that they have not been enough. “I will say I think that sometimes people pretend that the United States of America has a magic wand that it can wave to make any situation in the world roll out in exactly the way that we would want it to and that is never the case,” Miller, the State Department spokesperson, said during Monday’s press conference. But some reporters countered: If billions of dollars in military aid isn’t a magic wand, what is?

Read More: Over 800 Western Officials Denounce Their Governments’ Pro-Israel Policies

The perception the U.S. isn’t using the levers it has at its disposal stands to have profound consequences not only for Gaza (where more than 28,000 Palestinians have been killed and millions internally displaced), but for U.S.’s foreign policy interests writ large. “We’re having this conversation about how horrible it would be for U.S. credibility and U.S. leadership if we fail to support Ukraine,” says Duss, referencing Congressional Republicans stalling billions of dollars in vital U.S. aid to Ukraine. “The same applies here. Our inability to exert any meaningful influence on Israel—a state that is hugely reliant on U.S. support—is also enormously damaging.”

That damage risks extending to Biden personally as he embarks on his reelection campaign. The president is already seen to have lost substantial support among Arab American and young progressive voters over his handling of the Gaza war, which some observers warn could cost him support in key swing states. While the administration has taken some steps to address these concerns—among them a recent executive order designed to punish rising Israeli settler violence against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and a new memorandum requiring allies who receive U.S. military aid to provide “credible and reliable written assurances” of their adherence to international law—neither are expected to have a tangible impact on the war in the short-term. Their long-term impact will depend on how, or if, Biden chooses to use them.

“The tools are there,” says Blank. “Could they actually be implemented in the course of the few months that we have before the November election? … Right now, what President Biden is looking at is the sands running out domestically quicker than he is responding to the challenge.”

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