President Joe Biden’s meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today marked his first sit-down with a world leader since he exited the 2024 race on Sunday.
The high-profile meeting — and Netanyahu’s visit to Washington this week in general — has put one of the country’s most politically fraught foreign policy issues front and center for the presumptive Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, who is also meeting with Netanyahu on Thursday.
Here’s what we know about the prime minister’s White House visit so far today:
Thanking Biden for his support: In remarks made in front of reporters, Netanyahu thanked Biden for “50 years of support” for Israel and said he looked forward to working with Biden for the rest of his term.
A photo shared by the Israeli Government Press Office showed Netanyahu had signed the guestbook in the Roosevelt Room and thanked Biden for “decades of friendship and support” for Israel.
Pressure campaign: Behind closed doors, Biden was expected to be as forceful as he has ever been in urging Netanyahu to accept a ceasefire agreement, sources tell CNN.
A meeting with the families of Americans held hostage or killed by Hamas was viewed as an opportunity to hold Netanyahu accountable for his commitment to pursuing a peace deal, two US officials said.
After the meeting, family members said the US government, Congress and Israeli leadership appeared to be on the same page.
“While they could not share details, what they could share was this relationship. Maybe sometimes it’s rocky, but right now, you see it’s solid,” one family member, Liz Hirsh Naftali, said.
The families said they received an “iron clad” commitment to a peace deal from Netanyahu and Biden.
What the administration is saying: The differences remaining between ceasefire negotiators for Israel and Hamas “are narrow enough that, with some compromise and some leadership on both sides here, we believe that we can get this over the finish line,” White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told CNN on Thursday.
“We want to get this done,” he said on “CNN News Central,” adding that the Biden administration is pressuring leaders from both sides.
A State Department spokesperson also pushed back Thursday on Netanyahu’s claim to Congress that there were “practically” no civilian casualties in Rafah outside of one incident, saying “of course” there were civilian casualties in the southern Gazan city due to Israel’s military campaign.
CNN’s Michael Conte and Sam Fossum contributed reporting to this post.
This post has been updated with comments from family members following a joint meeting with Biden and Netanyahu.