Netanyahu, Putin hold 50-minute phone call; US expedites tank

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Netanyahu, Putin hold 50-minute phone call; US expedites tank munitions for Israel

 

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at length on Sunday with Russian President Vladimir Putin about Israel’s war against Hamas and the situation in the region, Bloomberg reported.

 

The US on Friday vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution that would have called for a ceasefire in Gaza, rebuffing last-ditch efforts from Arab leaders as alarm grows about Israel’s military campaign.

 

The US cleared the potential sale of almost 14,000 tank rounds to Israel, citing an emergency that allows for a fast-track notification to legislators as foreign military aid remains stalled in Congress.

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at length on Sunday with Russian President Vladimir Putin about Israel’s war against Hamas and the situation in the region, the prime minister’s office said.

 

In the 50-minute call, Netanyahu strongly criticised what he termed “dangerous cooperation” between Russia and Iran, according to the readout. He also expressed displeasure with the positions put forward by Russian representatives at the UN and other forums against Israel.

 

“The prime minister emphasised that any country that would suffer an attack such as Israel experienced would act with no less force than the one with which Israel operates,” his office said.

 

The Kremlin hasn’t released a readout of the conversation.

 

Hamas killed some 1,200 people in Israel in its attack on 7 October, including babies, children and the elderly, and kidnapped about 240 back to Gaza. Some of those taken hostage have since been released in an exchange deal with Palestinian prisoners held in Israel.

 

Netanyahu requested that Russia put pressure on the Red Cross to visit and provide medicine for the estimated 137 hostages still held by Hamas. No humanitarian organisation has visited them since they were taken.

 

US vetoes Security Council demand for ceasefire in Gaza

 

The US on Friday vetoed a United Nations Security Council resolution that would have called for a ceasefire in Gaza, rebuffing last-ditch efforts from Arab leaders as alarm grows about Israel’s military campaign.

 

The US was the only nation on the 15-member council to vote against the resolution, which it criticised for not condemning the 7 October attacks by Hamas, including sexual violence, and said wouldn’t lead to peace. The UK abstained and 13 nations voted in favour.

 

“Unfortunately, nearly all our recommendations were ignored and the result of this rushed process was an unbalanced resolution that was divorced from reality,” said Robert Wood, US deputy ambassador to the UN.

 

The resolution was introduced by the United Arab Emirates after UN Secretary-General António Guterres urged the Security Council to act. The proposal had nearly 100 cosponsors, a stark indication of how opposition is growing to Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

 

The Biden administration has also expressed reservations about the high civilian death toll but argues Israel must have the right to defend itself against Hamas, which is labelled a terrorist organisation by the US and the European Union.

 

Vetoing the resolution offers crucial support to Israel, in keeping with President Joe Biden’s argument that the close US ally must not have to tolerate the threat of Hamas. But it also alienates many allies overseas and progressive Democrats at home.

 

The UAE and other backers of the resolution argued that Israel’s response — which Hamas-run health authorities said had killed more than 17,000 people — has been too indiscriminate and provoked a humanitarian crisis for Palestinians who remain in Gaza.

 

In the meantime, Israel pressed on with its offensive throughout Gaza on Friday and Hamas targeted Israel with rockets. Israeli troops pushed deeper into the southern city of Khan Younis, the hometown of Hamas’ leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar.

 

Biden administration expedites US tank munitions for Israel

 

The US cleared the potential sale of almost 14,000 tank rounds to Israel, citing an emergency that allows for a fast-track notification to legislators as foreign military aid remains stalled in Congress.

 

Israel has requested to buy the 120mm munitions for an estimated cost of $106.5-million, the Pentagon’s Defense Security Cooperation Agency said on Saturday.

 

The proposed sale allows the US to arm an ally while congressional Republicans demand tougher border security in negotiations to unlock aid to countries, including Ukraine and Israel, and fund the federal government.

 

The Biden administration “provided detailed justification to Congress that an emergency exists that requires the immediate sale” to Israel, waiving congressional review requirements for arms exports, according to the statement.

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