United States President Joe Biden said Tuesday that Israel is losing support over the bombing of the Gaza Strip and said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu must change his government.

“They’re starting to lose support,” the Democratic leader said at a private event in Washington to raise money for his re-election campaign next year.

Biden criticized the current executive branch as “the most conservative in Israeli history” and lamented that “he doesn’t want a two-state solution.”

For this reason, the US President believed that Netanyahu should “change” his government in order to find a long-term solution to the conflict with the Palestinians, CNN reports.

The United States was the only UN Security Council member to vote last week against a resolution calling for a ceasefire in the Gaza war, a measure that failed to materialize due to Washington’s veto power on the body.

Joe Biden’s administration has shown its unwavering support for Israel’s elimination of Hamas from the beginning and opposes the ceasefire because it believes the Palestinian Islamist group will use it to rearm and attack the Jewish state again.

But as the number of civilian casualties from the Gaza bombings has risen, Washington has increased pressure on Netanyahu’s government to try to minimize the loss of innocent Palestinian lives.

Biden also opposes Israel’s post-war occupation of the Gaza Strip and supports the Palestinian National Authority, which currently administers parts of the occupied West Bank as well as taking over the enclave.

Netanyahu himself acknowledged on Tuesday that he has differences with his main ally over the future of the sector after the conflict ends.

The war broke out on October 7 following a Hamas attack on Israeli territory that included the launch of thousands of rockets and the infiltration of some 3,000 militias, which killed about 1,200 people and kidnapped another 250 in Israeli towns near the Gaza Strip.

Since then, Israel has attacked the Palestinian enclave with force by air, land and sea, where more than 18,200 people have already been killed, some 50,000 wounded and 1.8 million displaced, in the midst of a serious humanitarian crisis.