More than four months into the war between Israel and Hamas, the human toll continues to mount in Gaza, and the opportunity costs for wider regional stability and prosperity continue to grow.
The Biden administration’s main focus in recent weeks has been pursuing a longer-term ceasefire in Gaza in exchange for more releases of hostages.
While saying it's working to prevent a wider regional escalation, it has also stepped up retaliatory attacks on the Houthis in Yemen and militias in Iraq and Syria, as Iran and its network of regional partners continue to pose a strategic threat to the region.
The main driver of Biden’s emerging approach to the Gaza war is the revival of the idea of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the pursuit of Saudi-Israeli normalisation and the India-Middle East-Europe Corridor introduced last September at the G-20 meeting in India.
The central idea is based on the hope that a longer pause in the fighting before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan begins in early March could provide a foothold for wider diplomatic efforts that produce some pathway to peace.
Read more: The Middle East stands at a crossroads between two futures
Challenges
Several challenges to this game plan exist.
First, the key parties to this conflict, Israel and Hamas, may not even come to terms on a short-term deal. It has been more than two months since the last temporary ceasefire and hostage release took place, and the protracted negotiations mediated by Qatar and Egypt with deep US involvement have not yet produced results.
Second, building a bridge between a temporary ceasefire and more ambitious diplomatic moves is easier said than done because of the divisions within both Israeli and Palestinian politics.
A third complication is the many other issues that the United States faces, such as the Ukraine war and the 2024 general election campaign at home, all of which will put pressure on the already strained bandwidth of Biden and his team.