The Pak Banker

Israel must understand how it lost support of its friends

- Yossi Mekelberg

The chorus of a very popular Israeli song that topped the charts for weeks goes as follows: “The whole world is against us. Don’t worry, we’ll overcome.

They don’t care about us. Don’t worry, we’ll manage.” Despite the gloomy nature of these lyrics, it has a very cheerful tune and, for those of you who are unfamiliar with Israeli music, this is not a new song written in response to Oct. 7 and criticizin­g the way Israel is conducting the war in Gaza, but one that was written 55 years ago.

Yes, this sentiment is deeply ingrained in Israeli society, allowing a master manipulato­r like Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his like in the populist far right to exploit it for their personal and political interests and reject any criticisms that originate from abroad.

This sense of fear and vulnerabil­ity among many in Israel is currently being fueled by an ultranatio­nalistic and opportunis­tic government that keeps driving home the message that Israel can do no wrong and all those who criticize it either do not understand the grave dangers Israel is facing, do not care about this or are simply antisemite­s who want to see the state destroyed.

Without taking anything away from the severity of the atrocities it committed on Oct. 7, from the moment Hamas began to be repeatedly described by top Israeli officials and others as a Nazi movement, and the people of Gaza as active or at least passive collaborat­ors, the death and devastatio­n inflicted on Gazans by the Israeli armed forces has become justified and legitimize­d in the eyes of most Israelis.

Moreover, Israeli media seldom shows the horrors in Gaza, hence it is easier for many to remain willingly oblivious to it and show no sympathy for the great suffering of their Palestinia­n neighbors.

It is not that all criticism leveled against Israel is necessaril­y correct, fair or beyond reproach.

But much of it is legitimate and constructi­ve and, had its government heeded it, Israel’s internatio­nal standing would have been in much better shape and might have led to some strategic achievemen­ts in the war with Hamas.

It was US President Joe Biden

who, at the beginning of the war, knew in his heart of hearts that Israel under Netanyahu, who depends on the dangerous presence of the messianic-religious far right for his political survival, was not about to take a measured approach with a strategic horizon.

Instead, it would react with disproport­ionate force in a rush of anger, revenge and a drive to deter not only Hamas but the entire region from daring to repeat what Hamas did. And it would do that in the most simplistic and crude manner.

In his visit to Israel only days after Oct. 7, Biden warned the country’s leadership not to make the same mistakes as the US did in response to the 9/11 terrorist attack, observing that “those horrors have tapped into some kind of primal feeling in Israel just like it did in the United States.

Shock, pain, rage. An all-consuming rage.” Such a warning was prophetic, yet such an outcome could have been prevented by the very person who expressed that fear.

Neverthele­ss, within a very short time, which by now feels like an eternity, Israel has experience­d an unpreceden­ted loss of internatio­nal support because it ignored the warnings of Biden and others.

It feels almost inappropri­ate to speak of a PR battle in a war in which so many thousands of people have lost their lives and many more have been injured and deeply traumatize­d, while hundreds of thousands have also lost their homes, their belongings and probably their hope for a better future.

However, in the sad reality of modern warfare, the battle to win over public opinion is crucial and Israel started from a position where it would have been unimaginab­le to lose this battle.

The internatio­nal community showed sympathy and support and genuinely wanted to embrace the Israeli people in their time of great anguish, while those who were rejoicing at the massacre it suffered at the hands of Hamas were a very small minority and were rightly silenced.

Yet, six months later, Israel, by its reckless approach to the lives of ordinary Palestinia­ns in Gaza, including thousands of children, has reversed this broad internatio­nal support and also alienated those who are traditiona­lly and instinctiv­ely its friends and allies.

Instead of consolidat­ing support for the country, Netanyahu’s government has made it almost untenable to maintain it.

Staggering­ly, this has upset and angered many Israelis, and not only the prime minister’s political opponents, who cannot accept that a just war could involve killing more than 33,000 people, the vast majority of whom have committed no acts of militancy against Israel.

 ?? ?? ‘‘Staggering­ly, this has upset and angered many Israelis, and
not only the prime minister’s political opponents, who cannot
accept that a just war could involve killing more than 33,000
people, the vast majority of whom have committed no acts
of militancy against Israel.”
‘‘Staggering­ly, this has upset and angered many Israelis, and not only the prime minister’s political opponents, who cannot accept that a just war could involve killing more than 33,000 people, the vast majority of whom have committed no acts of militancy against Israel.”

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