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Monday Briefing: Biden clashes with Netanyahu
Monday Briefing: Biden clashes with Netanyahu
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Monday Briefing: Biden clashes with Netanyahu

 
Morning Briefing: Asia Pacific Edition

March 11, 2024

 
 
Author Headshot

By Amelia Nierenberg

Writer, Briefings

Good morning. We’re covering escalating tensions between President Biden and Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister.

Plus, remembering a Japanese anime genius.

 
 
 
President Biden getting off Air Force One at night.
President Biden has been more forceful in recent days about the plight of civilians in Gaza. Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times

Biden clashes with Netanyahu

The leaders of the U.S. and Israel are engaged in an increasingly public dispute over Gaza.

President Biden said on Saturday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was “hurting Israel more than helping Israel,” and rebuked him over the rising civilian death toll even as he affirmed American support for Israel. “It’s contrary to what Israel stands for, and I think it’s a big mistake,” Biden said. “So I want to see a cease-fire.”

Yesterday, Netanyahu rejected Biden’s assessment as “wrong.” He told Politico that he was doing what an “overwhelming majority” of Israelis wanted.

Biden’s comments highlighted the delicate position the U.S. is in: It is arming Israel while providing humanitarian aid to Gaza. Yesterday, the U.S. military said that a ship had set sail to build a floating pier off Gaza’s coast to allow for aid; the project could take weeks to complete.

Details: The floating pier will allow for the delivery of as many as two million meals a day to Gaza, which has a population of about 2.3 million people. But a Pentagon spokesman acknowledged that neither airdrops of aid, nor the pier, would be as effective as sending aid by land — which Israel has blocked.

A dire situation: Yazan Kafarneh, a 10-year-old boy, died last week. A picture of him, lying skeletal in a hospital bed, has become an emblem of the starvation in Gaza. Thousands of pregnant women there are suffering from malnutrition, health authorities said.

 
 
An elderly woman sits sideways between two men on a motorcycle.
Civilians, like this woman, have been hit by gunfire in the unrest. Ralph Tedy Erol/Reuters

Haiti’s capital ‘is a war zone’

Haiti is facing an uprising the likes of which has not been seen in decades.

Armed gangs have taken control of the main airport and are demanding that Ariel Henry, the prime minister, resign. But even though he is stranded in Puerto Rico — and U.S. and Caribbean leaders have been trying to convince him that continuing in power is “untenable” — Henry has refused to step down, an adviser said.

On the ground: “It is a war zone,” a doctor in Port-au-Prince said. Many civilians are afraid to leave their homes for fear of getting hit by stray bullets. The food supply is threatened, and access to water and health care is severely limited. See photos of the crisis here.

 
 
A man in a suit speaking from a lectern in a large hall that appears to be a parliamentary building.
Article 23 is expected to be enacted with unusual speed in the coming weeks. Leung Man Hei/EPA, via Shutterstock

Hong Kong moves on security law

Hong Kong officials, under pressure from Beijing, are scrambling to pass a strict, long-shelved national security law in the coming weeks. The full draft of the law, known as Article 23, was first made public on Friday and could impose life imprisonment for political crimes like treason.

John Lee, Hong Kong’s top leader, said it was necessary to close gaps in an existing national security law, imposed by Beijing in 2020, that was used to quash pro-democracy protests and jail opposition members. Critics say the law will stifle more freedoms, diminish Hong Kong’s authority and give officials more power to curb dissent.

In Beijing: Even as growth falters, President Xi Jinping is sticking to his belief that his vision of technological dominance can secure China’s rise.

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