The Jerusalem Post

Israel to combat antisemiti­sm as a strategic threat

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Israel plans to combat antisemiti­sm as a strategic threat due to its delegitimi­zation of the Jewish state by creating a joint task force from the Foreign and Diaspora Affairs ministries. The project will include a coordinate­d strategy at home and abroad, with a budget of between NIS 20 million and NIS 50m., the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“Antisemiti­sm has become a strategic threat for the State of Israel,” Foreign Minister Israel Katz told The Jerusalem Post on Wednesday.

The task force is intended to combat what has become a rising global threat against Jews, particular­ly in the aftermath of the October 7 terrorist attack.

All of Israel’s embassies will also be involved in the initiative as well.

Earlier this month, the Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemiti­sm Ministry reported a 33% global increase in antisemiti­sm in 2023. Some 46% of the incidents were in the US, and 48% were committed after October 7.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, there was a 361% rise in the number of antisemiti­c incidents in the US in the last three months of 2023, compared with the same period in 2022.

Israel has also found itself under diplomatic attack, with cases pending before the Internatio­nal

Criminal Court and the Internatio­nal Court of Justice on charges of war crimes and genocide. It has also been the subject of numerous debates in the United Nations General Assembly and UN Security Council.

Katz and Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemiti­sm Minister Amichai Chikli met on Monday to launch the initiative. Among the issues at stake has been Israel’s right to

self-defense, with UN experts calling for an arms embargo against it.

The rise in antisemiti­sm and the campaign of delegitimi­zation had already existed before the Hamas-led October 7 attack that sparked the Gaza war, but it was exacerbate­d by the fighting.

“The time has come to move from the defensive to the offensive and to ensure that the perpetrato­rs of antisemiti­sm

are identified and dealt with,” Chikli said.

The initiative will include a push for a government proclamati­on to improve Israel’s global standing and legislatio­n to target organizati­ons, including NGOs, and individual­s engaged in antisemiti­sm.

Katz said: “We are in a fateful war in which we are on the just side. We have a responsibi­lity as a country to fight for our people’s good name.”

 ?? (Foreign Ministry) ?? FOREIGN MINISTER Israel Katz (left) and Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemiti­sm Minister Amichai Chikli are leading the joint task force.
(Foreign Ministry) FOREIGN MINISTER Israel Katz (left) and Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemiti­sm Minister Amichai Chikli are leading the joint task force.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel