While talking to CNN’s Dana Bash on Sunday, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fought back after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer urged for new elections in Israel and stated, “If Senator Schumer opposes [Israeli] policies, he’s not opposing me. He’s opposing the Israeli people.”
Schumer triggered controversy Thursday by breaking ranks with Netanyahu and labeling him an “obstacle to peace.” Schumer has long been the country’s strongest advocate in the United States.
“I think what he said is completely inappropriate,” Netanyahu told Bash. “It’s inappropriate to go to a sister democracy and try to replace the elected leadership there. That’s something that [the] Israeli public does on its own. But we’re not a banana republic.”
“I think the only government that we should be working on to bring down now is the terrorist tyranny in Gaza, Hamas tyranny that murdered over 1,000 Israelis, including some dozens of Americans, and it’s holding Americans and Israelis hostage,” he added. “That’s what we should be focused on.”
Netanyahu then mentioned polling data from November 2023 that showed 82% of Americans supported Israel troops entering Gaza. A Gallup poll released on March 4, 2024, revealed that 58% of Americans have a “very” or “mostly favorable” view of Israel. While that’s still a majority positive, it’s the lowest favorability rating for the country in 20 years. Meanwhile, only 18% of Americans have a positive opinion about the Palestinian Authority government.
More importantly for the prime minister, he continued, “The majority of Israelis support the policies that we’re leading: going to Rafah, destroy the remaining Hamas terrorist battalions, make sure that we don’t put into Gaza instead of Hamas the Palestinian Authority that educates their children towards terrorism and the annihilation of Israel. “
“And also an enormous majority here, including 99 members to nine, oppose the idea of ramming down a Palestinian state down our throats,” he added. In February, 99 of the 120 members of Israel’s Knesset voted against recognizing a Palestinian state. An ultimate move to a two-state solution in the conflict remains the official policy of the United States and has for decades.
Bash pointed out that Schumer isn’t the only American elected official who has indicated disagreement with how Israel has pursued its stated objectives in the war against Hamas.
On Friday, President Joe Biden told reporters Schumer “made a good speech” and added, “I think he expressed serious concerns shared not only by him but by many Americans.”
To this, Netanyahu remained on the defensive and immediately cut her off. “No, no,” he replied. “There’s a fallacy that is being perpetrated here. And you should take polls, you’ll have your own polls, and check whether the people of Israel support the policies that I’m being criticized for.”
“That is, supporting the policies of going into Rafah — destroying a quarter of the remaining Hamas terrorist army, that’s like leaving a quarter of the Nazi terrorist army in Germany and saying, ‘No, we’re not going to finish the last quarter, and we’re not going into Berlin,'” he added.
Netanyahu still has many supporters, including the conservative former Sen. Joe Lieberman. In a conversation with the radio show “CATS Roundtable” that aired Sunday, the No Labels founder stated, “It is shocking for a U.S. Senator, especially a majority leader and the highest-ranking Jewish elected official in Washington, to advise Israelis to remove [Netanyahu].”
U.S. criticism of the conflict with Hamas has increased as reports show that over 30,000 Palestinians have died and millions have been forced to leave since the beginning of violence on Oct. 7. Israel’s planned ground invasion of Rafah, where 1.5 million Gazans have sought refuge, has received strong condemnation from around the world.
On March 11, a team of senators sent a letter to President Biden urging him to tie foreign aid given to Israel to the country's allowance of humanitarian aid into Gaza. The senators wrote, “We urge you to communicate … that a failure to promptly and significantly increase humanitarian access and facilitate safe aid deliveries throughout Gaza will result in serious consequences.”
The letter followed a demand from a group of House Democrats urging Biden to halt aid to Israel if the country invades Rafah. The letter noted that any potential invasion would probably go against the terms outlined in the recently signed National Security Memorandum 20 (NSM-20), which mandates recipients of U.S. aid to provide “credible and reliable written assurances” of compliance with international law.
Since World War II, Israel has received hundreds of billions of dollars in U.S. aid and is currently the top recipient of foreign aid. The country receives approximately $3.3 billion each year , a significant portion of which is used to buy U.S. military equipment and services through its Foreign Military Financing program. U.S. aid accounts for roughly 15% of Israel’s defense budget.
Watch the interview with Netanyahu in the video above.