Current:Home > StocksPalestinian American doctor explains why he walked out of meeting with Biden and Harris -Visionary Wealth Guides
Palestinian American doctor explains why he walked out of meeting with Biden and Harris
View
Date:2025-04-13 23:12:37
A Palestinian American doctor who walked out of a meeting with President Biden and other Arab and Muslim leaders and activists on Tuesday said he left "out of respect for my community."
Dr. Thaer Ahmad, an emergency physician from Chicago who traveled to Gaza earlier this year, told "Face the Nation" moderator Margaret Brennan the White House meeting was the first time Mr. Biden heard directly from people who had been on the ground in Gaza since Oct. 7. He said the president asked him to speak first and he detailed his experiences in Khan Younis and Rafah, telling Mr. Biden there was no way Israel could safely invade the southern Gaza city where more than one million Palestinians have fled since the war began.
"And then I asked to be excused, out of respect for my community who's mourning, who's grieving, who has really wanted to be heard and has felt silenced and excluded this entire time," Ahmad said.
Before leaving, Ahmad said he gave Mr. Biden a letter from an 8-year-old orphan in Rafah, asking the president not to allow an invasion.
Ahmad said he accepted the invitation because "I think there's a lot of us right now that have a serious sense of urgency and panic about what's taking place in Gaza, and specifically about the looming Rafah invasion that could take place."
"It seems to me that there's one person who can maybe make a difference and could put a stop to this, and that's President Biden," he said.
Ahmad said he feels Mr. Biden is not doing enough to stop Israel from going ahead with its planned invasion, and he says he's not alone.
Ahmad said he spoke to delegation members of U.N. Security Council states, "and they all felt that if the White House decided to make Rafah a red line, that the war would stop tomorrow. That it just required President Biden to say, 'Under no circumstance can this take place.'"
White House officials have previously said Mr. Biden has attempted to get Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to scale back plans for a Rafah invasion and to do more to protect civilians.
"Our position is that Hamas should not be allowed a safe haven in Rafah or anywhere else," White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said last month at a White House briefing. "But a major ground operation there would be a mistake. It would lead to more innocent civilian deaths, worsen the already dire humanitarian crisis, deepen the anarchy in Gaza and further isolate Israel internationally."
Ahmad said he felt comfortable leaving because he knew the other attendees would also be able to impress upon Mr. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris the dire situation in Gaza.
He said he wasn't initially sure he was going to walk out of the meeting, but that "when the president didn't even really mention Gaza or Palestine in his first initial comments to me, I felt that I needed to get out and I needed to at least express the hurt and the pain that the entire Palestinian American community is feeling."
"I don't speak on their behalf, I'm just one Palestinian American," Ahmad continued. "But the fact that there were no other Palestinian Americans in the room and that so many people are suffering right now, it was important for me to at least communicate that hurt and to walk away from the president like we felt he's walked away from us."
Ahmad told CBS News he plans to return to Gaza, despite the enormous risks involved. He said the last time he was in Gaza he saw the Israeli military raid a hospital where families had been sheltering.
"It's important to note that the Israeli military has done this to multiple hospitals. This is not just a one-time incident," Ahmad said. "So what I saw, there were families in these hospitals. Children playing ring-around-the-rosie. I saw kids who were affected by this war, who had been injured by it, who had been traumatized by it ... I can list hospital after hospital. And so that's really what makes me want to go back, is realizing that these people in the Gaza Strip are under a tremendous amount of pressure and pain, including the health care workers, including the aid workers. And if it's not people like us who are going to stand with them because the entire world has turned their back on them, then who else is gonna do it?"
Ahmad also said he never saw any signs of Hamas operating in hospitals.
"We saw the opposite of that," he said.
"I've been sharing those details since I've come back. I've been sharing those details with anyone who will listen. Senators, congressmen, I said that to the president and the vice president prior to leaving," he said. "There are real people that are there, innocent people, families, and they've been displaced multiple times. They've lost so much, including their homes, they've lost their everything... their livelihood.
"The idea of an invasion into Rafah by the Israeli military is just something that could be so disastrous," he said. "To a place that's seen so much disaster and humanitarian suffering."
Jordan FreimanJordan Freiman is an editor and writer for CBSNews.com. He covers breaking news, trending stories, sports and crime. Jordan has previously worked at Spin and Death and Taxes.
veryGood! (7662)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Disaster follows an astronaut back to Earth in the thriller 'Constellation'
- Biden to create cybersecurity standards for nation’s ports as concerns grow over vulnerabilities
- Barry Keoghan gets naked for Vanity Fair Hollywood cover issue, talks 'Saltburn' dance
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Shoppers Say This TikTok-Loved $1 Lipstick Feels Like a Spa Day for Their Lips
- It's not just rising sea levels – the land major cities are built on is actually sinking, NASA images show
- Hitting the Slopes for Spring Break? Here's Every Affordable Ski Trip Essential You Need to Pack
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Vanderpump Rules’ Tom Sandoval Responds to Backlash Over O.J. Simpson and George Floyd Comparisons
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Fentanyl dealers increasingly facing homicide charges over overdose deaths
- Georgia Senate considers controls on school libraries and criminal charges for librarians
- Greta Gerwig Breaks Silence on Oscars Snub for Directing Barbie
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- 88-year-old mother testifies in murder conspiracy trial about daughter’s disappearance
- Humanitarian crises abound. Why is the U.N. asking for less aid money than last year?
- LAPD releases body cam video of officer fatally shooting UCLA grad holding a plastic fork
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
'Dune 2' review: Timothee Chalamet sci-fi epic gets it right the second time around
Attrition vs. tradition: After heavy losses, Tampa Bay Rays hope to defy odds yet again
Police say armed Texas student wounded by officers in school had meant to hurt people
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Capital One is acquiring Discover: What to know about the $35 billion, all-stock deal
Seattle Mariners include Tucker, the team dog, in media guide for first time
FuboTV files lawsuit against ESPN, Fox, Warner Bros. and Hulu over joint streaming service