Vice President Kamala Harris once again caught flak for her wordage in a recent interview with 60 Minutes about whether or not the United States is an ally of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Representative Cory Mills (R-FL) discussed the remark and the weakness of the Biden-Harris Administration on the world stage on Fox Business's Bottom Line, saying former President Donald Trump could solve the crisis should he return to the White House.
"I think, with all due respect, the better question is, do we have an important alliance between the American people and the Israeli people, and the answer to that question is yes," Harris told 60 Minutes.
Bottom Line cohost Dagen McDowell suggested the remark demonstrated the Vice President's weakness, to which Rep. Mills agreed, saying, "She gives away her weakness, and weakness invites aggression, Dagen. You know that all too well as we watch the world on fire under this administration."
Additionally, Rep. Mills suggested the White House must "be taking responsibility for the attacks that Hamas has taken, that Hezbollah has taken, the attacks to disrupt global trade to 12% in the Red Sea by the Houthis."
After all, the Florida Congressman noted the Biden-Harris Administration removed the Yemeni Houthis from the list of foreign terrorist organizations, unfroze billions of dollars in fungible assets, and eased sanctions on Iran, allowing the regime to fund terror activities and export billions of dollars in oil to China.
"So what happened on October 7th would not have taken place if Donald J. Trump was still in the administration and President of the United States," added Mills.
Cohost Sean Duffy asked if Trump could solve the current crisis if he wins reelection in November, which Mills said he could.
"I also think we need to reflect on the Abraham Accords, which is the largest and probably the most significant peace treaty in the Middle East and normalized relations with Israel, something that has not happened since 1979 in Egypt and in 1994 in Jordan," Mills concluded, referencing the Camp David Accords of 1979 and the 1994 treaty between Israel and Jordan, sometimes called the Wadi Araba treaty.