The Pak Banker

Netanyahu’s Israel is fast losing its American friends

- Yossi Mekelberg

When a hard-hitting speech by the most senior Democrat in the Senate, one delivered from the floor of the chamber, is praised by the US president as a “good speech,” those who are on the receiving end of its tongue-lashing should take note, as if the words came straight from the mouth of the president.

Come to think of it, the heartfelt speech by Chuck Schumer, the Senate majority leader, about the fallout from the war in Gaza could, and should, have been delivered by Joe Biden himself.

What Schumer stated, passionate­ly and eloquently, could also easily have been pieced together from what the president and many members of his top foreign policy team have been publicly expressing over the past few weeks, albeit in dribs and drabs and without forming a coherent policy toward achieving an immediate ceasefire and establishi­ng a plan for peace between the Israelis and Palestinia­ns in the aftermath of this devastatin­g war.

Following Schumer’s speech on March 14, much was made of his call for Israel to hold a general election, which for all intents and purposes was a call not only to get rid of the country’s current, ultranatio­nalist government but for an end to the Benjamin Netanyahu era.

Certainly, he outlined four obstacles to an Israeli-Palestinia­n peace agreement based on a twostate solution, among which, as might be expected, was Hamas but also the Palestinia­n Authority, including President Mahmoud Abbas.

However, his forthright call for the change of a democratic­ally elected government, in a country that happens to be one of Washington’s closest allies, was unpreceden­ted.

Schumer, the highest-ranking Jewish American in the US government, stated bluntly: “I believe that holding a new election once the war starts to wind down would give Israelis an opportunit­y to express their vision for the postwar future.”

Netanyahu’s response to Schumer’s portrayal of him, as an obstacle to peace who should be removed, was to call it inappropri­ate, coming from a sister democracy,

and to declare that the issue was for the Israeli public alone to decide because Israel “is not a banana republic”, a claim that these days sounds more hollow than ever.

Firstly, the public is all-too desperate to make its wishes known at the ballot box, as has been repeatedly made clear over the past five months after survey.

After all, who would not like to see a new leadership replace a government that has presided over the worst disaster in the country’s history?

Secondly, no other leader in Israel’s history has taken the country so far along the road to becoming a banana republic, through implicatio­n in corruption scandals and the distortion of good governance as a result of cronyism and incompeten­ce, than Netanyahu.

Moreover, he has no leg to stand on when he complains about interventi­on in the domestic affairs of another country, for he has done so throughout his political career, particular­ly with regard to the US.

For months now, Netanyahu and other prominent Israelis have been dismissive of criticism about the contempt with which they have treated civilian lives while conducting the war in Gaza.

They shrug it off as originatin­g from lefty-liberal progressiv­es who oppose Israel and Zionism. Whatever merit there might be in this view is very limited, at best, and by no stretch of the imaginatio­n do Biden and Schumer fit

in survey such a profile.

For many years they have been two of Israel’s closest friends and supporters, and in Schumer’s case representa­tive of the segment of the Jewish community in America that wholeheart­edly supports Israel and the very idea of a Jewish state.

Netanyahu might pour scorn on the current position of Biden and Schumer but the people of his country should not, not only because of the merits of that position, but for the price that might have to be paid for ignoring it.

If in the early days of Israel’s independen­ce American support was derived primarily from what both sides believed to be shared democratic values, together with a US sense of obligation to help ensure the security and well-being of Israel for historical reasons, a true strategic alliance subsequent­ly evolved between the two countries.

This is increasing­ly jeopardize­d every single day that Netanyahu remains prime minister. If the trend continues, the close relationsh­ip between the nations will increasing­ly come under scrutiny and, in addition, support from its Jewish community might also suffer long-term damage.

 ?? ?? ‘‘Netanyahu might pour scorn on the current position of Biden and Schumer but the people of his country should not, not only because of the merits of that position, but for the price that might have to be
paid for ignoring it.”
‘‘Netanyahu might pour scorn on the current position of Biden and Schumer but the people of his country should not, not only because of the merits of that position, but for the price that might have to be paid for ignoring it.”

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