Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Pelosi: Bipartisan support for Israel ‘does not give license to so many dying’

The former House Speaker called for Washington to use its “leverage” over Israel; when pressed, she didn’t explain what that would entail.

Nancy Pelosi
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi with attendees at the 2019 California Democratic Party State Convention at the George R. Moscone Convention Center in San Francisco, California. Credit: Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons.

Former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told CNN that the United States needed to take action to push Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reduce civilian casualties, referring not to Israelis but Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

“We all support Israel. It is in our national interest, our security interest to do so, our values interest to do so over time,” the longtime California representative said on Monday. “But right now, the leverage that we have given Netanyahu has been used in a way that is most destructive.”

Christiane Amanpour, chief international anchor for the cable-news network, asked Pelosi to explain what that “leverage” meant.

“Well, our support for Israel has always been bipartisan. And we want it to continue to be so in the Congress, in the House, the Senate, the White House as well as among the American people,” she said. “But it does not give license to so many people dying—not combatants, as I said—in the war.”

Pelosi told Amanpour: “We have to again try to strive to bring it to a two-station solution. I emphasize the word ‘solution’ because I’ve said that to Netanyahu; it’s not just a two-state situation, it’s a solution, one that really works out the security, the prosperity, the freedom for the Palestinian people as well as the security of the Israelis.”

“My sense is that John wanted to retire with the confidence that, in the absence of the first generation of Catholic and Jewish leaders who lay the foundation of friendship, these relations would grow and thrive,” the scholar Malka Simkovich told JNS.
“Before the war, the public was divided,” the premier said. “I think that has changed.”
Prosecutors say defendants linked to the IRGC planned assassinations and arson against the Federal Republic’s top Jewish leader, a pro-Israel activist and Jewish businesses.
A change in Austrian law could allow survivors who remained in the country after World War II while searching for relatives or awaiting visas to receive long-denied benefits.
The facility, mainly used by budget airlines, had been shut for four months due to reduced traffic during the war with Iran.
“Peace is tied to freeing Lebanon from the de facto Iranian occupation,” said Gideon Sa’ar.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.