Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Biden, Netanyahu talk for first time in nearly 50 days

Asked about the call, Biden “joked as he walked out of the Roosevelt Room, ‘we didn’t talk about the storm,’” per the White House pool report.

Joe Biden
U.S. President Joe Biden talks on the phone with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on July 4, 2024. Photo by Adam Schultz/White House.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke on Wednesday morning—their first phone call since Aug. 21, according to White House readouts of their communications.

The two leaders did not appear to speak on Oct. 7, the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s terror attack in southern Israel, and the bloodiest day in Jewish history since the Holocaust, and there were no public acknowledgments of communication between the two in the aftermath of Iran’s Oct. 1 missile barrage against the Jewish state.

Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee for president, joined the two leaders on the call, during which Biden “affirmed his ironclad commitment to Israel’s security” and “condemned unequivocally Iran’s ballistic missile attack against Israel on Oct. 1,” per a White House readout of the call.

Biden “emphasized the need for a diplomatic arrangement to safely return both Lebanese and Israeli civilians to their homes on both sides of the Blue Line” and “affirmed Israel’s right to protect its citizens from Hezbollah, which has fired thousands of missiles and rockets into Israel over the past year alone,” per the White House.

The U.S. president also stressed “the need to minimize harm to civilians, in particular in the densely-populated areas of Beirut,” according to the U.S. readout.

“On Gaza, the leaders discussed the urgent need to renew diplomacy to release the hostages held by Hamas,” it added, and Biden “discussed the humanitarian situation in Gaza and the imperative to restore access to the north, including by reinvigorating the corridor from Jordan immediately.”

The call, according to Israeli media, lasted about 50 minutes.

The U.S. president commented on the call later on Wednesday. “Asked about his call with Netanyahu, Biden joked as he walked out of the Roosevelt Room, ‘we didn’t talk about the storm,’” per the White House pool report. (Hurricane Milton is approaching Florida.)

Biden has previously said that he would oppose an Israeli airstrike on Iran’s oil infrastructure, suggesting that such an attack would not be proportional, given that the roughly 180 ballistic missiles that the Islamic Republic fired at Israel did not result in any Israeli deaths or cause serious damage to infrastructure.

“I’m seeing an intensity of antisemitic attacks,” Gov. Ned Lamont told JNS. “A lot of it is energized by what’s happening in the Middle East and on social media.”
The prime minister’s office said that the U.S. president committed to a final deal that will include removal of nuclear material, dismantling enrichment facilities, limits on missiles and halting Iran’s support for terror proxies.
The ruling follows a Board of Immigration Appeals determination that Mohsen Mahdawi is deportable, a decision he is now challenging in federal court.
Rabbi Raphi Steiner told JNS that he worries that his son is growing up in an environment “wondering why some hater decided it would be a good idea to write on his shul that Jews don’t belong here.”
“Based on the fact that discussions with the Islamic Republican of Iran have been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and approved, I have, as president of the United States of America, canceled the scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran this evening,” the president said.
Michael and David Shabsels, who operate 30 camps across four states, reported up to $1 billion in liabilities as a New Jersey court approved continued access to funds to keep camps operating.