The condemnation for the New York Times continued on Sunday after the newspaper’s international print editions ran an anti-Semitic cartoon depicting Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a guide dog leading a blind President Trump in a skullcap.

“We stand with Israel and we condemn antisemitism in ALL its forms, including @nytimes political cartoons,” Vice President Pence tweeted on Sunday.

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway called the cartoon, which ran last Thursday, “odious and offensive” and ridiculed the Times for its mea culpa.

“Apologies usually include words like regret, sorry and apologize. They didn’t do that,” she said Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

The newspaper released an second apology on Sunday that would be included in the Times print editions on Monday.

“The image was offensive, and it was an error of judgment to publish it. It was provided by The New York Times News Service and Syndicate, which has since deleted it,” said the statement from the Times.

“We note the @NYTimes’ promise of ‘significant changes’ following its publication of a grotesquely antisemitic cartoon on Thursday and its offensive non-apology apology yesterday and look forward to seeing those changes in practice. Actions speak louder than words,” the American Jewish Committee wrote in a tweet, linking to the Times initial statement.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center said the Times “needs an intervention.”

“It runs a cartoon on #Passover deploying animalization of world leader, @netanyahu as a dog, replete with #StarofDavid leading @POTUS. Will @nytimes fire anyone or pat itself on the back for freedom of expression to denigrate Jews again,” the group said.

In an editorial in the Jerusalem Post, the newspaper marked on the publication of the cartoon just days before a man walked into a synagogue in San Diego and killed one worshipper and wounded three others.

“These two events are obviously not equivalent, but anyone with a basic awareness of history should understand why the cartoon is still alarming and damaging,” the Jerusalem Post wrote.

“Offensive and an error of judgment are understatements. After all, the shooting only two days after its publication showed how much potential the memes of Jew-hatred have for them to then be translated from the page into deadly action,” the newspaper continued.

Israeli Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan called for the cartoonist to be fired.

“The anti-Semitic caricature published by the New York Times is shocking and reminiscent of Nazi propaganda during the Holocaust,” Erdan told the Times of Israel.