Biden is calling on Israeli and Arab leaders to think hard about their eventual postwar reality.
It's one, he argues, where finally finding agreement on a long-sought two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict should be a priority.
«There's no going back to the status quo as it stood on Oct. 6,» Biden told reporters, referring to the day before Hamas militants attacked Israel and set off the latest war.
The White House says Biden conveyed the same message directly to Netanyahu during a telephone call this past week.
«It also means that when this crisis is over, there has to be a vision of what comes next, and in our view it has to be a two-state solution,» Biden said.
The push for a two-state solution — one in which Israel would co-exist with an independent Palestinian state — has eluded U.S. presidents and Middle East diplomats for decades.
It's been put on the back burner since the last American-led effort at peace talks collapsed in 2014 amid disagreements on Israeli settlements, the release of Palestinian prisoners and other issues.
Palestinian statehood is something that Biden rarely addressed in the early going of his administration. During his visit to the West Bank last year, Biden said the «ground is not ripe» for new attempts to reach a permanent peace even as he reiterated to Palestinians the long-held U.S. support for statehood.