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U.S. Foreign Policy

The Biden administration has reportedly reached an understanding with Jerusalem that the IDF operation in the city will not be significantly expanded until after the visit.
“President Biden has given Hamas the greatest victory it could hope for,” said Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho). “He has driven a wedge between the United States and Israel.”
“You can’t disentangle one piece from the others,” said the U.S. national security advisor.
“AMP and NSJP do not merely assist Hamas’s ongoing terror campaign abroad—they perpetuate it in the U.S.,” according to the complaint.
It seems the kingdom is preparing to reap the political dividend of the war in Gaza in the wake of the Palestinian Authority’s rise at the expense of Hamas.
Riyadh hopes to generate bipartisan support in the U.S. Senate before a possible Trump re-election.
“We express our full solidarity and support to Israel and its people, and reaffirm our commitment towards its security,” they added.
Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer is scheduled to meet the Saudi ambassador to Washington in pursuit of an historic agreement.
The American diplomat spoke with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman about recognizing the Jewish state.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, chair of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, refused the demand.
“I regret posting anything about any of these people,” he says. “I don’t believe anything that these cranks have said.”
The economic organization also said UNRWA, which has been criticized for its close ties with Hamas, would help distribute $600 million in aid.