Makoto Hasebe: Slow Starter Whose Diligence Paid off with Japan Captaincy

 Makoto Hasebe took the advice of his grandfather to stick with football and has cemented his position as one of Japan’s greats. Photograph: Masashi Hara/Getty Images
Makoto Hasebe took the advice of his grandfather to stick with football and has cemented his position as one of Japan’s greats. Photograph: Masashi Hara/Getty Images
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Makoto Hasebe: Slow Starter Whose Diligence Paid off with Japan Captaincy

 Makoto Hasebe took the advice of his grandfather to stick with football and has cemented his position as one of Japan’s greats. Photograph: Masashi Hara/Getty Images
Makoto Hasebe took the advice of his grandfather to stick with football and has cemented his position as one of Japan’s greats. Photograph: Masashi Hara/Getty Images

Like many other Japanese players of his generation the national captain, Makoto Hasebe, started to dream of becoming a professional footballer when he read the popular and globally famous manga series Captain Tsubasa. Inspired by the miraculous skills of Tsubasa Oozora, the comic books’ eponymous star, Hasebe has been kicking a ball for as long as he can remember.

But there were also unique cultural factors behind Hasebe’s boyhood obsession with the game. In a country that has long been more associated with two other sports, baseball and sumo, his home town of Fujieda in Shizuoka Prefecture was highly unusual by Japanese standards due to its extraordinary passion for football instead. Despite Fujieda’s status as a small provincial city with a population of just over 100,000 people, it has produced a succession of renowned players including Hiroshi Nanami and Masashi Nakayama, who both represented Japan at the 1998 World Cup in France.

Growing up in such an environment Hasebe – who has starred in the Bundesliga for a decade now – was not rated all that highly before his late teens.

Partly thanks to the tutelage of his parents, Hasebe was a diligent schoolboy and, at 15, earned a place at Fujieda Higashi High School. This famous institution accepts only students of strong academic ability, but is also renowned for its highly successful football club who are perennial contenders at the nationally-televised All Japan High School Soccer Tournament each year. At first, Hasebe made little impression within the team and for some time struggled to even make the bench. Team-mates from the time recall that he spent more time during his first year quietly going about chores than actually playing; in particular, they say, he had a most steady arm when it came to marking the lines on the pitch.

It was only towards the end of his second season at Fujieda Higashi that he finally got his chance to make an impression with a football rather than just white paint. A late growth spurt helped him win a regular starting position and, slowly, the confidence of those around him. Even then, his reputation as a player was still only average at best; the future long-serving captain of the Japanese national team was never once seen as a candidate for the armband at his own high school.

However, as a third-year, Hasebe would show a dramatic and sustained improvement in his performances as an attacking midfielder. Around the turn of the millennium, major nationwide tournaments at under-18 level were held every summer, autumn, and winter. Hasebe performed superbly at both the summer and autumn tournaments to attract a surge of attention having been a total unknown just months earlier. Soon afterwards, he earned what would be the first of many call-ups to the Japanese age-level national teams.

The professional J-League clubs did not ignore these performances and it was Urawa Red Diamonds who pursued Hasebe’s signature most persistently. However, the 18-year-old’s parents remained keen that he should continue his education and argued that he should go to university rather than take the risk of turning professional at his age. Even his high school coach, despite such an upturn in performances, told him again: “There is no way you will make it in the professional leagues”.

The only one to offer different advice was another member of Hasebe’s family – his grandfather: “If you’re a man, you take the challenge.” It was his grandfather who had originally bestowed upon him the name Makoto – meaning “honesty” or “integrity” – and he continued to support his beloved grandson’s dreams of playing football for a living by persuading everyone else to put their objections aside. Ultimately, parents and teachers alike would bow to the strength of this ambition and allowed Hasebe to choose his own path.

Roughly a year after Hasebe signed his first professional contract, his grandfather fell ill and passed away. To Hasebe, still only 19, this came as a crushing blow but, at the same time, he discovered an ever more indefatigable desire to make a success of his career. Those who witnessed his second season with Urawa described him as a completely different person as a series of spirited performances led to a regular place in the starting XI for the first team. His development continued unabated towards, at last, captaincy material and his status today as one of the greats of Japanese football.

If Hasebe manages to score in Russia this summer, it would be no surprise to see him point upwards and shout to the heavens. This goal, of course, would be dedicated to the grandfather who has inspired him throughout everything.

The Guardian Sport



UN Sounds Alarm Over Gaza Aid as Israel Pushes Assault Into Rafah

Displaced Palestinians displaced... Rafah - Gaza Strip, May 9, 2024 (AP)
Displaced Palestinians displaced... Rafah - Gaza Strip, May 9, 2024 (AP)
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UN Sounds Alarm Over Gaza Aid as Israel Pushes Assault Into Rafah

Displaced Palestinians displaced... Rafah - Gaza Strip, May 9, 2024 (AP)
Displaced Palestinians displaced... Rafah - Gaza Strip, May 9, 2024 (AP)

The United Nations warned on Friday that aid for the Gaza Strip could grind to a halt in days, as Israeli troops took their ground war into the crowded city of Rafah, a key aid corridor for the famine-threatened strip.

Israeli tanks captured the main road dividing the eastern and western sections of Rafah, effectively encircling the eastern part of the city in an assault that has caused Washington to block some military aid to its ally.

Residents described almost constant explosions and gunfire east and northeast of the city on the southern edge of the Gaza Strip on Friday, Reuters reported.

Hamas said it ambushed Israeli tanks near a mosque in the east of the city, a sign the Israelis had penetrated several kilometres from the east to the outskirts of the built-up area.

Israel has ordered civilians out of the eastern part of Rafah, forcing tens of thousands of people to seek shelter outside the city, previously the last refuge of more than a million who fled other parts of the enclave during the war.

Israel says it cannot win the war without assaulting Rafah to root out thousands of Hamas fighters it believes are sheltering there. Hamas says it will fight to defend it.

Supplies were already running short and aid operations could halt within days as fuel and food stocks get used up, United Nations aid agencies said.

"For five days, no fuel and virtually no humanitarian aid entered the Gaza Strip, and we are scraping the bottom of the barrel," said the UNICEF Senior Emergency Coordinator in the Gaza Strip, Hamish Young.

Aid agencies say the battle has already put hundreds of thousands of already displaced civilians in harm's way.

"It is not safe, all of Rafah isn't safe as tank shells landed everywhere since yesterday," Abu Hassan, 50, a resident of Tel al-Sultan west of Rafah told Reuters via a chat app.

"I am trying to leave but I can't afford 2,000 shekels ($540) to buy a tent for my family," he said. "There is an increased movement of people out of Rafah even from the western areas, though they were not designated as red zones by the occupation.

"The army is targeting all of Rafah not only the east with tank shells and air strikes."

Israeli tanks have already sealed off eastern Rafah from the south, capturing and shutting the only crossing between the enclave and Egypt. An advance on Friday to the Salahuddin road that bisects the Gaza Strip completed the encirclement of the "red zone" where they have ordered residents out.

"Over the course of the last three days or so the situation has really deteriorated incredibly dramatically in Rafah," said James Smith, a British emergency room doctor volunteering at the European Hospital just north of Rafah.

"The number of airstrikes has increased. The number of artillery strikes has increased, and we've heard that heavy military equipment, tanks and so on, have been on the streets of eastern Rafah and also been to the Rafah border crossing with Egypt," he said in a voice message forwarded to Reuters by a colleague.

"All humanitarian aid convoys have been unable to pass into Gaza from the south for the last couple of days. No fuel has entered and already the UN is planning for the worst case scenarios, rationing fuel for essential activities only."

The Israeli military said its forces in eastern Rafah had located several tunnel shafts, and troops backed by an air strike fought at close quarters with groups of Hamas fighters, killing several.

It said Israeli jets had hit several sites from which rockets and mortars had been fired towards Israel in recent days, including at the Kerem Shalmon crossing point.

- 'FIGHT WITH OUR FINGERNAILS'

The prospect of a full assault on Rafah this week has opened up one of the biggest rifts for generations between Israel and its closest ally the United States, which has blocked shipments of weapons to Israel for the first time since the war began.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Thursday Israel would "fight with our fingernails" if it must. In a US television interview, he said he hoped Israel would overcome its disagreements with President Joe Biden.

Israel's Rafah operation has blocked aid deliveries through both of the checkpoints into southern Gaza - including the only crossing from Egypt and nearby Kerem Shalom from Israel. Israel has said it reopened Kerem Shalom, but aid agencies say they have not been able to get supplies through.

In East Jerusalem, the main UN agency for Palestinians, UNRWA, closed a compound on Friday after Israeli demonstrators set fire to parts of its grounds.

Ceasefire talks also broke up on Thursday with no agreement to halt the fighting and release hostages captured in the Hamas-led Oct. 7 attacks that precipitated the war.

Hamas had said it agreed at the start of the week to a proposal submitted by Qatari and Egyptian mediators that had previously been accepted by Israel. Israel said the Hamas proposal contained elements it cannot accept.

More than 34,000 Gazans have been killed in the seven months of war, according to health authorities in the Hamas-controlled enclave who say thousands more dead are probably buried under rubble. Israel launched the assault to annihilate Hamas after the Oct. 7 attacks.


Saudi Arabia, Nigeria Explore Agricultural, Food Security Cooperation Opportunities

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA
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Saudi Arabia, Nigeria Explore Agricultural, Food Security Cooperation Opportunities

Photo by SPA
Photo by SPA

The Saudi Minister of Environment, Water, and Agriculture Eng. Abdulrahman Alfadley, accompanied by his delegation, engaged in discussions with the Nigerian Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Sen. Abubakar Kyari.

Their talks focused on identifying investment opportunities within agriculture and food security sectors and exploring avenues to enhance trade and economic collaboration between the two countries.
During the meeting, the focus was on cooperation in diverse sectors, with a particular emphasis on collaborations in agriculture, as well as food security. The meeting included discussions on investment possibilities and the available agricultural resources and food products, SPA reported.
In November 2023, Saudi Arabia hosted the Saudi-African Summit, which aimed to foster relations and promote collaborative efforts between the Kingdom and African states.


Local, Int’l Partnerships Enhance Market Access for Saudi Products

Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)
Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)
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Local, Int’l Partnerships Enhance Market Access for Saudi Products

Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)
Saudi EXIM Bank participated in the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 (Photo: Turki Al-Aqili)

The Riyadh International Industry Week 2024 concluded on Thursday with the signing of a number of local and international partnerships and agreements, with the aim to promote the access of Saudi products to global markets.
The Saudi Exports Development Authority signed a memorandum of understanding with the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources, with the aim to support local industries and facilitate their access to international markets.
The MOU highlights potential areas of cooperation and seeks to encourage firms that are listed in the Future Factories Program to export their products worldwide.
Meanwhile, Alod Company (a Saudi global shipping gateway) signed an agreement with the National Parcel Stations Network Company (Parcelat) to enable its customers to receive and deliver shipments around the clock.
Alod also signed an agreement with Camion aimed at enabling the latter’s customers to automate international and local shipping operations.
Meanwhile, the Saudi Export and Import Bank was able to find credit solutions exceeding SAR 10 billion ($2.6 billion) during the first 4 months of 2024.
The CEO of the Saudi Export-Import Bank, Eng. Saad Al-Khalab, said that the bank seeks to achieve a fourfold increase of the 2024 target number by 2030.
The Saudi Export and Import Bank, which was established in February 2020, aims to promote the development and diversification of national non-oil exports and increase their competitiveness, by providing export financing, guarantee, and export credit insurance services with competitive advantages.
Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat on the sidelines of the Riyadh International Industry Week 2024, Al-Khalab said that the bank offered many products that help Saudi exporters expand globally and reduce their export risks, which facilitates their access to new markets.

 


Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong to Establish Fund to Track Stock Indices

CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong to Establish Fund to Track Stock Indices

CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)
CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The first global edition of the Capital Markets Forum, organized by the Saudi Tadawul Group and the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEX), kicked off in Hong Kong on Thursday, in the presence of over 650 people from around the world, including financial leaders, investors and representatives of regulators and enterprises.
The forum highlights the Hong Kong stock exchange operator’s latest strategy to attract new investors, with the aim to replace stockholders from the United States and Europe who may be deterred from doing business in China at a time of rising geopolitical tensions. Last month, the country's securities regulator said that it would encourage more companies to hold IPOs in the city.
The forum discusses important investment prospects through global partnerships and the means to exploit investment opportunities in the Kingdom and China, as well as studying future investment portfolios.
At the opening of the forum, the CEO of the Saudi Tadawul Group, Khalid Al-Hussan, said that the decision to host the Capital Markets Forum in Hong Kong demonstrates the growing relationship between Saudi Arabia and Asia, adding that the event would constitute a major bridge for investors from the two countries and pave the way for a more integrated system of global capital markets.
“The convergence between Hong Kong’s technological development and the Kingdom’s ambitious economic diversification enables a new era of knowledge exchange and cooperation that extends beyond the capital markets,” he stated.
Al-Hussan explained that during the forum, more than a thousand investors from listed companies and financial industry leaders will gather to explore challenges and prospects in the field of sustainability, innovation, and global investment trends.
For her part, Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. CEO Bonnie Chan said that she expects large initial public offerings (IPOs) to return to the city with the improvement of basic conditions and the support of Chinese regulators.
In her speech during the opening ceremony, she said that the Hong Kong Stock Exchange received more than 100 new listing applications this year, with activity rebounding, especially after the support measures taken by China.
Hong Kong has returned to the radar of global investments, after the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) announced last month that it would facilitate IPOs in Hong Kong by leading Chinese companies. The regulatory body also announced the expansion of the cross-border investment scheme to strengthen the city’s position as an international financial center.
The new measures began to attract money flows into the market, and trading value rose, Chan underlined, which she said created a more favorable environment for companies to launch their IPOs.
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange has had a difficult time in recent years. The faltering Chinese economy and increasing disputes between Beijing and Washington have exhausted investor interest in China-linked stocks.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong said in a statement on Thursday that Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia are exploring the creation of an exchange-traded fund (ETF) tracking Hong Kong indices.
He added that the Hong Kong government is currently working with several financial institutions to develop the ETF.
Wong also reaffirmed Hong Kong’s commitment to its partnership with Saudi Arabia, noting that Cathay Pacific Airways is expected to re-launch direct passenger flights between Hong Kong and Riyadh.


Türkiye Says it Killed 17 Kurdish Fighters in Northern Iraq, Syria

FILE PHOTO: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attends a press conference during his visit, in Baghdad, Iraq April 22, 2024. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani/Pool/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attends a press conference during his visit, in Baghdad, Iraq April 22, 2024. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani/Pool/File Photo
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Türkiye Says it Killed 17 Kurdish Fighters in Northern Iraq, Syria

FILE PHOTO: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attends a press conference during his visit, in Baghdad, Iraq April 22, 2024. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani/Pool/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan attends a press conference during his visit, in Baghdad, Iraq April 22, 2024. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani/Pool/File Photo

Turkish forces have killed 17 militants of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) across various regions of northern Iraq and northern Syria, the defense ministry said on Friday, according to Reuters.
In a post on social media platform X, the ministry said its forces had "neutralized" 10 PKK insurgents found in the Gara and Hakurk regions of northern Iraq, and in an area where the Turkish military frequently mounts cross-border raids under its "Claw-Lock Operation.”
It said another seven militants were "neutralized" in two regions of northern Syria, where Türkiye has previously carried out cross-border incursions.
The ministry's use of the term "neutralized" commonly means killed. The PKK, which has been waging an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984, is designated a terrorist organization by Türkiye, the United States and the European Union.
Türkiye's cross-border attacks into northern Iraq have been a source of tension with its southeastern neighbor for years. Ankara has asked Iraq for more cooperation in combating the PKK, and Baghdad labelled the group a "banned organization" in March.
Last month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan held talks with officials in Baghdad and Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, about the continued presence of the PKK in northern Iraq, where it is based, and other issues. Erdogan later said he believed Iraq saw the need to eliminate the PKK as well.
Türkiye has also staged military incursions in Syria's north against the YPG militia, which it regards as a wing of the PKK.


US Police Dismantle Pro-Palestinian Tent Encampment at MIT

A line of police in riot gear walk past police dismantling pro-Palestinian encampment at MIT, before dawn Friday, May 10, 2024, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)
A line of police in riot gear walk past police dismantling pro-Palestinian encampment at MIT, before dawn Friday, May 10, 2024, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)
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US Police Dismantle Pro-Palestinian Tent Encampment at MIT

A line of police in riot gear walk past police dismantling pro-Palestinian encampment at MIT, before dawn Friday, May 10, 2024, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)
A line of police in riot gear walk past police dismantling pro-Palestinian encampment at MIT, before dawn Friday, May 10, 2024, in Cambridge, Mass. (AP Photo/Josh Reynolds)

Police early Friday have begun dismantling a pro-Palestinian tent encampment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
People were being detained and video showed police roaming through the encampment. Organizers said only about 10 people were inside the camp, but a crowd outside the camp began gathering and chanting pro-Palestinian slogans.
Tensions have ratcheted up in standoffs with protesters on campuses across the United States and increasingly in Europe. Some colleges cracked down immediately, while others have tolerated the demonstrations. Some have begun to lose patience and call in the police over concerns about disruptions to campus life and safety, The Associated Press reported.
The move at MIT comes several days after police first attempted to clear the encampment only to see protesters storm past barriers and restore the encampment, which includes about a dozen tents in the heart of the campus in Cambridge.
Before removing the encampment, MIT had also started suspending dozens of students involved in the encampment, meaning they wouldn’t be able to take part in academic activities nor commencement.
Protesters insisted the move would not stop them from demanding that MIT end all ties to the Israeli military.
“This is only going to make us stronger. They can’t arrest the movement," Quinn Perian, an undergraduate student at MIT and organizer for MIT Jews for Ceasefire, said. “We are going to continue and won’t back down until MIT agrees to cut ties with the Israeli military. MIT would rather arrest and suspend some students than they would end their complicity with the genocide going in Gaza.”


2 Paris Policemen Wounded after Man Shot Them Inside Police Station

(FILES) This photograph taken in Paris on April 22, 2022 shows the Eiffel Tower with La Defense business district in the background. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)
(FILES) This photograph taken in Paris on April 22, 2022 shows the Eiffel Tower with La Defense business district in the background. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)
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2 Paris Policemen Wounded after Man Shot Them Inside Police Station

(FILES) This photograph taken in Paris on April 22, 2022 shows the Eiffel Tower with La Defense business district in the background. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)
(FILES) This photograph taken in Paris on April 22, 2022 shows the Eiffel Tower with La Defense business district in the background. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)

A man shot and wounded two police officers in Paris after he got hold of one of the officer's weapons while he was being held at a police station, said Paris police chief Laurent Nunez on Friday, confirming earlier media reports.
The incident occurred on Thursday evening.
Police had initially arrested the man on suspicion of assaulting a woman inside a residential building in the 13th district, Reuters reported. Earlier media reports described that assault as a case of domestic violence.
"We have two police officers who are seriously wounded," Nunez told reporters, adding the suspect had also been seriously injured. French media reports said police had shot back at him after the suspect first opened fire.
Nunez did not identify the suspect.
The shooting comes with France on a high state of security alert ahead of the Olympic Games, which start in July.


Greece to Bring in Egyptian Farm Workers Amid Labor Shortage

FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
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Greece to Bring in Egyptian Farm Workers Amid Labor Shortage

FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Passengers of a flight from Amsterdam arrive at the international airport in Athens, Greece, June 15, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File Photo

Greece will start bringing in workers from Egypt this summer to take on temporary farming jobs under a deal between the countries to tackle a labor shortage, the migration ministry said on Friday.
After a decade of pain, the Greek economy is forecast to grow nearly 3% this year, far outpacing the euro zone average of 0.8%, Reuters reported.
But an exodus of workers during Greece's economic crisis, a shrinking population and strict migration rules have left the country struggling to find tens of thousands of workers to fill vacancies in farming, tourism, construction and other sectors.
Greece will take in around 5,000 seasonal farm workers under the 2022 deal signed with Egypt.
The countries have discussed expanding the "mutually beneficial" scheme to the Greek construction and tourism sectors, the Greek Migration Ministry said in a statement.


The Biden-Netanyahu Relationship is Strained Like Never Before. Can the Two Leaders Move Forward?

Then-Vice President Joe Biden (L) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands while giving joint statements at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, March 9, 2016. (Debbie Hill/AFP via Getty Images via JTA)
Then-Vice President Joe Biden (L) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands while giving joint statements at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, March 9, 2016. (Debbie Hill/AFP via Getty Images via JTA)
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The Biden-Netanyahu Relationship is Strained Like Never Before. Can the Two Leaders Move Forward?

Then-Vice President Joe Biden (L) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands while giving joint statements at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, March 9, 2016. (Debbie Hill/AFP via Getty Images via JTA)
Then-Vice President Joe Biden (L) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands while giving joint statements at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, March 9, 2016. (Debbie Hill/AFP via Getty Images via JTA)

President Joe Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have long managed a complicated relationship, but they're running out of space to maneuver as their views on the Gaza war diverge and their political futures hang in the balance.
Their ties have hit a low point as Biden holds up the delivery of heavy bombs to Israel — and warns that the provision of artillery and other weaponry also could be suspended if Netanyahu moves forward with a widescale operation in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, The Associated Press said.
Netanyahu, for his part, is brushing off Biden’s warnings and vowing to press ahead, saying, “If we have to stand alone, we will stand alone.”
“If we need to, we will fight with our fingernails. But we have much more than fingernails,” he said.
Biden has long prided himself on being able to manage Netanyahu more with carrots than sticks. But the escalation of friction over the past seven months suggests that his approach may be long past its best-by date.
With both men balancing an explosive Mideast situation against their own domestic political problems, Netanyahu has grown increasingly resistant to Biden’s public charm offensives and private pleading, prompting the president's more assertive pushback in the past several weeks.
“If they go into Rafah, I’m not supplying the weapons that have been used historically to deal with Rafah, to deal with the cities, that deal with that problem," Biden said in a CNN interview Wednesday, laying bare his growing differences with Netanyahu.
Biden aides nonetheless insist the president is unwilling to allow the US-Israel relationship to truly rupture on his watch. They cite not only the political imperative — a majority of Americans support Israel — but also Biden’s personal history with the country and his belief in its right to defend itself.
The president's aides, watching how pro-Palestinian protests have roiled his party and the college campuses that have been breeding grounds for Democratic voters, have mused for months that Biden could be the last classically pro-Israel Democrat in the White House.
Their optimism about their ability to contain Netanyahu may be falling into the same trap that has vexed a long line of American presidents who have clashed with the Israeli leader over the decades.
White House national security spokesman John Kirby on Thursday declined to say whether Biden informed Netanyahu of his decision to suspend shipment of 3,500 bombs when the leaders spoke earlier this week. But he said Biden has been “direct and forthright” with Netanyahu about his concerns.
Biden and Netanyahu have known each other since Biden was a young senator and Netanyahu was a senior official in Israel's embassy in Washington.
They've hit rough patches before.
There were differences over Israel building settlements in the West Bank during Barack Obama's administration when Biden was vice president. Later, Netanyahu vehemently opposed Biden's push to resurrect the Iran nuclear deal sealed by Obama and scrapped by Donald Trump. Netanyahu chafed at Biden prodding him to de-escalate tensions during Israel's bloody 11-day war with Hamas in 2021.
The leaders went more than a month earlier this year without talking as Biden's frustration with Netanyahu grew over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
The relationship remained workable despite such differences between the center-left Democrat and the leader of the most far-right coalition government in Israel's history.
But with the Biden-Netanyahu relationship now coming under greater strain than ever before, it is unclear how the leaders will move forward.
Netanyahu is caught between public pressure for a hostage deal and hard-liners in his coalition who want him to expand the Rafah invasion, despite global alarm about the harm it could do to some 1.3 million Palestinians sheltering there. He's made clear that he will push forward with a Rafah operation with or without a deal for hostages.
The Israeli leader vowed to destroy Hamas after its Oct. 7 rampage in southern Israel in which 1,200 people were killed and some 250 were captured and taken hostage. But his public standing has cratered since then, as he faces pressure to find a pathway to a truce that would bring home the remaining hostages and the remains of Israelis who have died in captivity.
He's resisted an investigation into what led to the intelligence and military failures leading up to the Hamas attack. All the while, he's still facing legal problems, including a long-running corruption trial in which he is charged with fraud and accepting bribes.
Netanyahu’s political survival may depend on the Rafah offensive. If he reaches a hostage deal that stops short of conquering Rafah, hardliners in his coalition have threatened to topple the government and trigger new elections at a time when opinion polls forecast he would lose.
“To keep his partners on board and prevent them from pre-empting an election, in which Likud will be decimated and he will be turned out of office, he needs to keep the ‘total victory’ myth alive – and that is only possible by avoiding a deal with Hamas,” wrote Anshel Pfeffer, a columnist and author of a Netanyahu biography, in the Haaretz daily.
Aviv Bushinsky, a former spokesman and chief of staff for Netanyahu, said the Israeli leader remains focused on the war’s primary goal – defeating Hamas – because of concerns about his image and legacy.
He said Netanyahu has spent his career branding himself as the “tough guy on terror.”
“He thinks this is how he will be remembered. He’s been promising for a decade to cream Hamas," Bushinsky said. “If he doesn’t, in his mind he’ll be remembered as the worst prime minister of all time.”
Biden, meanwhile, faces mounting protests from young Americans, a segment of the electorate critical to his reelection. And he's faced backlash from Muslim Americans, a key voting bloc in the battleground state of Michigan. Some have threatened to withhold their votes in November to protest his administration's handling of the war.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Biden ally who has been frustrated by the administration’s handling of the war, said Thursday Biden should go further and suspend delivery of all offensive weaponry to Israel.
“The United States does and should stand by its allies, but our allies must also stand by the values and the laws of the United States of America,” Sanders said. “We must use all of our leverage to prevent the catastrophe in Gaza from becoming even worse.”
At the same time, Biden is facing bruising criticism from Republicans, including presumptive 2024 GOP presidential nominee Trump, who say that his decision to hold back weapons is a betrayal of an essential Mideast ally.
“What Biden is doing with respect to Israel is disgraceful. If any Jewish person voted for Joe Biden, they should be ashamed of themselves. He’s totally abandoned Israel,” Trump told reporters on Thursday.
Idaho Sen. Jim Risch, the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Biden's move is “simply a nod to the left flank” that is handing “a great victory to Hamas.”
Friction between the US and Israeli leaders is not without precedent.
President George H.W. Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir’s relationship was strained as the Republican administration threatened to withhold $10 billion in loan guarantees to thwart new settlement activity in the West Bank. Obama and Netanyahu's relationship was marked by mutual distrust over the Democrat's effort to reignite the Middle East peace process and forge the Iran nuclear deal.
“There were always workarounds if the heads of government really don’t get along. We may get to that,” said Elliot Abrams, a senior national security official in the George W. Bush administration. “But of course, this may be a sort of problem that solves itself in that one or both of them may be gone from office" in a matter of months.


UK Exits Recession with Fastest Growth in Nearly Three Years

A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)
A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)
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UK Exits Recession with Fastest Growth in Nearly Three Years

A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)
A general view shows Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, and the Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the bell "Big Ben", in London on June 15, 2023. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP)

Britain's economy grew by the most in nearly three years in the first quarter of 2024, ending the shallow recession it entered in the second half of last year and delivering a boost to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of an election.
The Office for National Statistics said gross domestic product expanded by 0.6% in the three months to March, the strongest growth since the fourth quarter of 2021 when it rose by 1.5%.
The first-quarter growth exceeded all forecasts in a Reuters poll of 39 economists which had pointed to a 0.4% expansion of gross domestic product in the January-to-March period, after GDP shrank by 0.3% in the final quarter of 2023.
Friday's data was welcomed by Sunak who said the economy had "turned a corner", although the opposition Labor Party, which has a large lead in opinion polls, accused Sunak and finance minister Jeremy Hunt of being out of touch.
"There is no doubt it has been a difficult few years, but today's growth figures are proof that the economy is returning to full health for the first time since the pandemic," Hunt said.
But the opposition Labor Party rejected those claims.
"This is no time for Conservative ministers to be doing a victory lap and telling the British people that they have never had it so good," said Labor's Rachel Reeves, who hopes to succeed Hunt as finance minister.
The Bank of England, which held interest rates at a 16-year high on Thursday, forecast quarterly growth of 0.4% for the first quarter of this year and a smaller 0.2% rise for the second quarter.
Sterling strengthened against the US dollar after Friday's ONS figures were released.
TURNING A CORNER?
On a monthly basis, the economy grew by 0.4% in March, faster than the 0.1% growth forecast by economists in a Reuters poll, reflecting strength in retail, public transport, haulage and health - partly due to fewer public-sector strikes.
Car manufacturing also performed well, offset by continued weakness in construction, the ONS said.
Friday's data also showed that GDP in March was 0.7% higher than a year earlier, and above all economists' expectations of a 0.3% rise.
However, Britain has still had one of the slowest recoveries from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic.
At the end of the first quarter of 2024, the country's economy was just 1.7% bigger than its level in late 2019, before the pandemic, with only Germany among the G7 faring worse.
"Despite the better near-term outlook, the improvement in GDP growth looks likely to be constrained by the ongoing weakness in productivity growth as well as reduced scope to increase employment levels," Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK, said.
GDP per head rose for the first time in two years in the first quarter, up 0.4%, but was 0.7% lower than a year earlier, highlighting the ongoing squeeze on living standards and Britain's struggle to boost productivity.
"In per capita terms, it could be said that UK households have seen little meaningful improvement in living standards in the last two years," Gora Suri, economist at PwC, said.