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Israel's embattled UN envoy hits back hard as the Gaza crisis worsens

Iain Marlow, Augusta Saraiva, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations often fights with the organization where he serves, especially as criticism has mounted over his country’s conduct in the war against Hamas. He’s just not used to doing it without the U.S. in his corner.

That’s where Gilad Erdan found himself recently when the U.S. chose not to veto a Security Council resolution calling for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza. President Joe Biden’s administration had blocked several such resolutions since the conflict began.

“To this council, Israeli blood is cheap,” Erdan told the council after the council’s vote. “This is a travesty, and I’m disgusted.”

They were relatively mild remarks for Erdan, 53, who has made it a strategy to tear down the U.N. as the Gaza war has dragged on. He called on Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to resign after the U.N. chief said the Hamas attack “did not happen in a vacuum,” and this week Erdan said Adolf Hitler “would be singing the U.N.’s praises.”

His approach to the global body has become an increasingly risky and dissonant one as the Palestinian death toll continues to rise. Even the U.S. has seen its close ties with Israel fray, with Biden calling out Israel more often over the need for more humanitarian aid, the Israeli attack that killed seven aid workers from World Central Kitchen and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plans for a military operation in Rafah, where more than 1 million civilians are sheltering.

“Erdan’s two main tasks are to score public points against Israel’s detractors and to delegitimize criticism from all parts of the U.N. system,” said Richard Gowan, U.N. director for the International Crisis Group. “Israel’s strategy of dismissing the U.N. completely does alienate a lot of otherwise broadly sympathetic countries, notably the Europeans.”

 

The ambassador’s tactics encapsulate an element of Israel’s strategy in the months since fighters from Hamas — designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. and European Union — attacked Israel from the south on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking some 240 hostages. Israel’s counter-attack has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza.

U.N. members have yet to act jointly to condemn the Hamas attack. But rather than seeking sympathy, Erdan has deployed an uncompromising approach toward fellow diplomats and the world body.

Two U.N. diplomats from countries with close ties to Israel, who asked not to be identified discussing Erdan, said that it’s becoming increasingly hard for their ambassadors to appear alongside him. Two others suggested his attacks on the U.N. system alienate moderate U.N. members.

Erdan, who briefly served as ambassador in Washington, is blunt about the U.S. While praising close ties with Washington as “one of the biggest assets that Israel has,” he said in an interview that “it’s not being understood enough” that the relationship is “mutually beneficial.” He said Israeli military technologies and intelligence-gathering in the Middle East help protect U.S. troops.

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