Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in the Middle East Tuesday to help Egypt broker a rumored cease-fire between Israel and Hamas. It’s the most active engagement the U.S. has had in the region since the violence reached a tipping point seven days ago.
“President Obama asked me to come to Israel with a very clear message: America’s commitment to Israel’s security is rock-solid and unwavering,” Clinton said in a press conference in Israel. “The rocket attacks from terrorist organizations inside Gaza on Israeli cities and towns must end, and a broader calm restored.”
A senior member of Hamas leadership signaled there would be no truce agreement reached Tuesday night. NBC’s Ayman Mohyeldin told Andrea Mitchell that the agreement “is unlikely to be a long-term truce.” More likely, Mohyeldin said, is a cessation of the violence.
Clinton was scheduled to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem Tuesday night and with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank, followed by a meeting with Egyptian President Mohammad Morsi in Cairo Wednesday. Clinton is departing straight from her Asian tour of Thailand, Myanmar, and Cambodia, with President Obama this week.
“[Clinton] has been actively engaged on the phone, but sometimes there’s no substitution for showing up, as the secretary herself likes to say, for talking face-to-face, for doing what you can in person,” State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said Tuesday.
President Obama phoned Egyptian President Mohammad Morsi—the third call between the two in the last 24 hours—from aboard Air Force One on his return from Cambodia Tuesday. Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes told press that Obama “commended President Morsi’s efforts to pursue a de-escalation.”
One key player is absent from Clinton’s travel roster: Hamas leadership. The U.S. officially considers Hamas a terrorist organization, and therefore does not engage with the group. The Obama administration is facing criticism that this policy has allowed Hamas to become more powerful in recent years.
“It’s very hard to blame the Obama administration, on one hand, for disengaging from the problem because there’s no chance of near-term success,” The Atlantic’s Jeffery Goldberg told Andrea Mitchell Tuesday. “On the other hand, because of where we are, Hillary Clinton has to run from her Asia pivot, literally from Asia, back to the Middle East just to kind of patch this together temporarily.”








