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Blinken back to Israel this week after meeting with Arab nations

Antony Blinken will travel to Israel Monday — his second visit in five days — after talks with Arab leaders aimed at avoiding broader conflict.
Blinken back to Israel this week after meeting with Arab nations
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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken will return to Israel this week after completing a frantic six-country rush through Arab nations aimed at preventing the Israel-Hamas war from igniting a broader regional conflict.

The U.S. State Department announced Blinken's plan to travel Monday to Israel — his second visit in five days — as America's top diplomat arrived in Cairo for talks Sunday with Egypt's president, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. It was the last of Blinken's meetings with Arab leaders amid increasing fears that an impending Israeli ground offensive into Gaza could spark a wider war with devastating humanitarian consequences.

Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters traveling with Blinken that the secretary was returning to Tel Aviv "for further consultations with Israeli officials." Miller did not elaborate.

Before landing in Egypt, Blinken met on Sunday morning with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh. That meeting followed talks over the previous three days with the leaders of the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority.

Blinken began the whirlwind trip on Thursday in Israel, pledging support and solidarity for the country as it responds to last week's Hamas surprise attacks. Blinken also spoke by phone with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to seek Beijing's support in discouraging others from getting involved.

Yet as plans for Israel's military action to eradicate Hamas have taken shape with heavy airstrikes and warnings for more than a million Palestinians to evacuate the northern Gaza Strip, concerns for a broader conflict have intensified. In his talks with Arab leaders Blinken has stressed the importance of not allowing that to happen.

SEE MORE: US State Department: 29 Americans dead, 15 missing in Israel-Hamas war

In Washington, Biden's national security adviser said the U.S. was not "making requests or demands of Israel with respect to its military operations." Jake Sullivan, making the rounds of the Sunday TV news shows, said the Biden administration was "simply stating our basic principles – the principles upon which this country is based and all democracies, including Israel, are based. It's what makes us different from the terrorists, that in fact we respect civilian life."

He said the U.S. was not "not interfering in their military planning or trying to give them instructions or requests specific." Sullivan said the U.S. is conveying the message in public and in private that "all military operations should be conducted consistent with law of war, that civilians should be protected, that civilians should have a real opportunity to get to safety" and have access to food, water, medicine and shelter.

Sullivan also said the U.S. has been unable so far to get American citizens out of Gaza through Egypt's Rafah crossing with Gaza.

"It has been difficult to execute that operation to facilitate their passage out. … It's a high priority," acknowledging that "I'm not aware of anyone else being able to get out at this time." The crossing was closed because of airstrikes early in the war. There are an estimated 500 Americans living in Gaza, but that number is imprecise, officials have said.

Underscoring fears of a wider conflict, the U.S. military has positioned an aircraft carrier battle group in the Eastern Mediterranean and on Saturday announced the deployment of a second one. The naval presence is intended to serve as a deterrent to other countries and groups, like Iran and Syria and Lebanon's Hezbollah, not to enter the conflict.

Also Saturday, as the Israeli military said its assault against Hamas targets in Gaza would begin very soon, President Joe Biden spoke by phone with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

U.S. officials have said the Arab reaction to Blinken's message has been generally positive — acknowledging Israel has a right to respond to the Hamas attacks but expressing deep concern about the humanitarian situation in Gaza and unable to stay silent about the Palestinian civilian casualties that result. The Arab leaders have also said the current situation cannot be resolved without an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal that gives the Palestinians an independent state.

In his roughly hourlong meeting with Prince Mohammed at the de facto Saudi leader's private farm outside Riyadh, Blinken "highlighted the United States' unwavering focus on halting terrorist attacks by Hamas, securing the release of all hostages, and preventing the conflict from spreading," the State Department said.

"The two affirmed their shared commitment to protecting civilians and to advancing stability across the Middle East and beyond," according to a department statement.

SEE MORE: US calls for civilian safety, but didn't ask Israel to delay invasion

The Saudi description of the meeting focused primarily on Palestinian civilians, echoing the sentiments that the other Arab leaders with whom Blinken has met. It said Saudi Arabia would object to the targeting of "civilians in any way or disrupt(ing) infrastructure and vital interests that affect their daily lives."

The prince "stressed the need to work to discuss ways to stop the military operations that claimed the lives of innocent people," the Saudi Press Agency said in a report about the meeting.

Prince Mohammed also made clear the Saudi emphasis on the need to "stop the current escalation, respect international humanitarian law, including lifting the siege on Gaza, and work to create conditions for the return of stability," it said.

Before the Hamas attacks in Israel last Saturday, Blinken had planned to visit Israel and Saudi Arabia this coming week to discuss what had been ongoing negotiations for an agreement to normalize relations between the two countries. After the attacks, Blinken changed his plans so he could get to Israel quickly to show solidarity. The normalization talks are now on hold, a result that U.S. and other officials believe was a main goal of Hamas and its prime sponsor, Iran.

Neither the U.S. nor Saudi statements mentioned the matter.


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