Trump signals support in call with Netanyahu: ‘Do what you have to do’
Trump offers Israel his backing in wars with Hamas and Hezbollah even as his campaign seeks Arab American votes.
President
Donald Trump shakes hands with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu in the Oval Office after signing a presidential proclamation
on Golan Heights on March 25, 2019. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump expressed support for Israel’s offensives against Hamas
and Hezbollah in a recent call with the country’s prime minister — a
position that could complicate his campaign’s outreach to Arab Americans
claiming he opposes the war.
Trump
told Benjamin Netanyahu in one call this month, “Do what you have to
do,” according to six people familiar with the conversation who spoke on
the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive and confidential
information. Trump has said publicly that the two have spoken at least
twice in October, with one call as recently as Oct. 19.
“He
didn’t tell him what to do militarily, but he expressed that he was
impressed by the pagers,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina),
who was on a call this month with Trump and Netanyahu, referring to the
Israeli operation that killed Hezbollah leaders with explosive batteries
inside pagers. “He expressed his awe for their military operations and what they have done.”
Graham
added: “He told them, do what you have to do to defend yourself, but
we’re openly talking about a new Mideast. Trump understands that very
much there has to be change with the corrupt Palestinian state.”
An adviser to Netanyahu declined to comment.
Trump
campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said: “Thanks to President
Trump’s leadership, there was historic peace in the Middle East. Now,
all of the progress made by President Trump in the region has been
broken by the Harris-Biden Administration’s weakness and America Last
policies. When President Trump is back in the Oval Office, he will fix
the mess Kamala and Biden’s policies created. Israel will once again be
protected, Iran will go back to being broke, terrorists will be hunted
down, and the bloodshed will end.”
Trump
has tried to court both Jewish and Muslim voters with at times
contradictory positions on the conflicts in Gaza and Lebanon. He
portrays himself as an unrivaled friend to Israel in front of Jewish
audiences, while surrogates appeal to Arab communities by saying Trump
supports peace and opposes the war.
Netanyahu,
for his part, has spent years cultivating Republicans and has shown a
clear preference for Trump in this election. People familiar with the
situation said he is trying to regain Trump’s favor after antagonizing
him by congratulating President Joe Biden on winning the 2020 election, a victory Trump has never accepted.
Trump’s
message strays from the Biden administration’s painstaking efforts to
persuade Israel to avoid escalating the conflict with Iran. U.S.
officials are comfortable with Israel hitting Iranian military sites but
want to avoid the targeting of oil, gas and nuclear infrastructure,
which could upend the global economy amid Iranian threats to retaliate
against Western energy interests.
Following consultations with Israeli officials, the Biden administration expects Israel to strike Iran sometime after Secretary of State Antony Blinken leaves the region,
said two senior U.S. officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity
to discuss a sensitive military matter. The top U.S. diplomat recently
met with officials in Saudi Arabia and Qatar, where he departed Thursday
for additional meetings in London.
Foreign
governments regularly communicate with both major-party nominees and
their representatives leading up to an election as they try to assess
the potential impact on their national interests. Candidates have faced
criticism in the past for venturing into foreign relations while not
holding government office.
During
the 1968 campaign, Republican Richard M. Nixon secretly worked to
undermine the Johnson administration’s peace talks in Vietnam — efforts
not revealed until decades later.
Some U.S. officials have accused Ronald Reagan’s 1980 campaign of
making a secret deal with Iran to wait to release American hostages
until after the election. Two congressional inquiries found insufficient
evidence to support the claim.
In private, Trump has expressed hostility to Iran because the country’s security forces hacked his campaign,
according to the Justice Department, and the former president believes
that Tehran is seeking to kill him in retaliation for the 2020 U.S.
strike that killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.
Trump
asked U.S. intelligence officials briefing him on the threat whether
Iran was involved in the two assassination attempts against him in July
and September, and several of Trump’s advisers have become convinced
of an Iranian connection. There is no evidence tying Iran to either of
the assassination attempts, but the FBI has not ruled out the
possibility of a connection, according to people familiar with the
matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reveal sensitive
discussions.
Trump
has emphasized international conflict and volatility, especially in
Israel and Ukraine, to criticize Biden’s and Vice President Kamala
Harris’s global leadership.
His
campaign also is betting on appealing to American Jews, especially in
the pivotal swing state of Pennsylvania, by emphasizing Israel and
antisemitism. Without evidence, Trump accuses Harris, who is married to a
Jewish man, of hating Israel and Jews, and he warns of the state’s
total destruction if she wins. He has also criticized American Jews —
who for years have strongly supported Democrats over Republicans —
sometimes in terms that many view as playing on antisemitic tropes.
Trump
and Netanyahu sign the Abraham Accords during a ceremony at the White
House on Sept. 15, 2020. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
“The Jewish people would have a lot to do with a loss,” Trump said at campaign event in September. “It’s only because of the Democrat hold, or curse, on you.”
Trump
has pledged if elected to reimpose his ban on travel from some
Muslim-majority countries and to revoke student visas from participants
in pro-Palestinian protests. He has repeatedly crowed about relocating
the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv; moving to normalize
relations between Israel and some Arab states through the Abraham
Accords; and recognizing the Golan Heights as part of Israel. “What’s
that worth, $2 trillion?” he has asked donors. “And I did it in five
minutes.”
Israel, he told the donors, will “be finished” if he isn’t reelected. “I actually believe that,” he said.
At a fundraiser this year, Trump repeatedly assured donors
that he would be solidly behind Israel and would throw campus
protesters out of the country. “Maybe you have to go further than that,”
he said.
“We’re going to set that movement back 25 or 30 years,” he said.
At
the same fundraiser, he said that Netanyahu “has got to be able to
finish it. It’s a sick deal. And I’m one of the only people that says
that now.”
Trump
has made similar comments publicly. Speaking to reporters in Detroit on
Oct. 18, he criticized Biden by saying the president was trying to
restrain Netanyahu.
“He’s
trying to hold him back, and he probably should be doing the opposite,
actually,” Trump said. “I’m glad that [Netanyahu] decided to do what he
had to do, but it’s moving along pretty good.”
At
the same time, Trump and allies have been courting Arab American voters
in states such as Michigan at events with surrogates including Graham,
former acting intelligence chief Ric Grenell, and Massad Boulos, a
Lebanese businessman whose son is married to Trump’s daughter Tiffany.
This month Trump met with Sheikh Belal Alzuhairy of the Islamic Center
of Detroit and Sheikh Saleh Ibrahim of the Iman Islamic Complex, a
Yemeni American congregation in the same city.
Boulous has been particularly active, four people in the region say.
A
pro-Trump super PAC called Future Coalition PAC has been placing
contradictory ads targeting Arab voters in Michigan and Jewish voters in
Pennsylvania. The group’s digital ads in Michigan portray Harris as
taking Israel’s side against pro-Palestinian protesters. In
Pennsylvania, on the other hand, the group’s ads question her support
for Israel and accuse her of “pandering to Palestine.”
The
goal of the Trump campaign in Michigan, advisers said, is to persuade
voters in heavily Muslim areas like Dearborn not to vote for the
Democratic ticket, even if they are not willing to cast a ballot for
Trump, a campaign adviser said. In September, Trump received the
endorsement of Amer Ghalib, a Yemeni immigrant who serves as the mayor
of Hamtramck, Mich., home to a large Muslim population. He also won the
backing of Yemerican PAC, the Yemeni American Political Action Committee
of Hamtramck & Detroit, and Dearborn, Mich., community leader
Samraa Luqman.
From
left, Bahrain Foreign Minister Abdullatif al-Zayani, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Donald Trump and United Arab
Emirates Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan participate in a
signing ceremony for the Abraham Accords on the South Lawn of the White
House on Sept. 15, 2020. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Graham
was in Michigan on Wednesday pitching Trump to Muslim voters, he said.
“I told the Arab Americans here today in Michigan, your homelands —
whether it be Yemen, Syria, Lebanon, Pakistan — the best hope for your
homelands to live free from Iranian aggression is with Trump,” Graham
said.
Even some of Trump’s critics suggest that he has made serious inroads among Arab Americans while supporting Netanyahu.
“Because
the situation has escalated in recent weeks, I think a lot people say
what’s the difference?” said Warren David, a third-generation Arab
American who is president of Arab America, a digital media platform. “ I
am shocked at how many people say they are voting for Trump, when we
were talking to people on the streets in bakeries and in different
places. Trump is really capitalizing on this.”
David
said he was approached by a Trump surrogate to appear at his conference
in Michigan this weekend and said no. Others — including leaders from
the “uncommitted” movement who urged votes against Biden in the
Democratic primary race — are appearing, he said.
“He
instituted the Muslim ban, he made Jerusalem the capital of Israel, he
gave the Golan Heights away. There is your heart, and people are mad.
And there is your logic. People aren’t voting strategically,” David
said.
Top
Harris campaign officials are blanketing Michigan this weekend,
according to activists, along with Rep. Ro Khanna (D-California).
“We
just have to really remind people about Donald Trump’s real record and
how he treats the Arab American community, and remind people of the
Muslim ban, that he wants to start internment camps,” said Rep. Debbie
Dingell (D-Michigan).
Ellen Nakashima and Isaac Stanley-Becker contributed to this report.