Thursday, September 25, 2025

The Fall Guy

The State of Israel has never been so publicly humiliated as it is now. To say that the animosity toward the Jewish state is unprecedented would be an understatement.

The saddest part about this fact is that it is the net result of the worst atrocity committed against the Jewish people since the Holocaust. A crime carried out by an Iran-backed and financed Hamas, whose crimes against humanity rival those of Nazi Germany.

That atrocity should have brought Israel a major increase in sympathy and support. And it did - for about ‘five minutes’. It didn’t take long for the world to condemn Israel’s military response against Hamas in Gaza. Early on, an explosion near a Gaza hospital was immediately blamed on an Israeli airstrike. Protests erupted almost overnight on college campuses across the country.

Even though it was soon shown that the explosion near that hospital was the result of a failed rocket fired at Israel by Islamic Jihad - falling short of its target, the anti-Israel narrative stuck. Since then, animosity toward Israel’s conduct in the war has only increased. By what seems like orders of magnitude.

The American people have been divided over Israel’s war in Gaza. But the momentum has been steadily shifting in the direction of disapproval. I am not going to rehash all the details about why this has happened, other than to say that the horrific images—paired with a narrative blaming Israel exclusively - is why animosity has only grown. Today, it seems that only the U.S. government is still defending Israel.

While I am absolutely convinced of the rectitude of Israel’s defensive posture, there is no convincing its detractors. Images speak louder than the most lucid justifications. That is also why so many prominent progressive politicians and entertainment figures - many of them Jewish - feel the same way.

A common denominator in all this is Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. He is being blamed for it all. Again, I won’t go into too much detail, but suffice it to say that there seems to be a universal feeling among Israel’s detractors that Netanyahu’s determination to retain power at all costs is what is driving the war.

Their perception is that his military tactics are being driven by extremist right-wing politicians like Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich, both of whom openly call for an Israel from the ‘river to the sea’ - by annexing all of Gaza, Judea, and Samaria. That would restore Israel to its biblical borders. In pursuit of that goal, Palestinians unwilling to accept annexation would be ethnically cleansed. This was essentially the ‘solution’ proposed decades ago by Rabbi Meir Kahane.

Netanyahu is no follower of Rabbi Kahane. His ‘solution’ is as unlikely to happen now as is a Palestinian state. Neither is a sane policy.

But it doesn’t really matter what I believe, or even that the truth is on Israel’s side. The world has been duped into believing what it sees instead of believing the truth. Hamas has worked their ‘magic’. Their deadly tactics, which include sacrificing their own women and children and then blaming Israel, have succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.

That Hamas’s leadership has been destroyed is, at best, a temporary victory for Israel. If they are left to fight another day, they will reconstitute their ranks faster than you can say ‘Jack rabbit’. More than ever, Palestinian youth are ‘chomping at the bit’ to become Hamas fighters for a Palestine ‘from the river to the sea.”

A permanent ceasefire now without ridding Gaza of Hamas, (which seems to be what everybody wants) would mean they will soon return to full strength. This is why I believe Netanyahu is right in trying to destroy them. I’m just not sure he will succeed - unless he kills every Palestinian youth in Gaza. And that WOULD be genocide.

The stakes are high. The repercussions of failure are unacceptable. Yet the growing global animosity toward Israel - framing its war as genocide - could turn Israel into a pariah state boycotted by the entire world, including the U.S. - if the next presidential election is won by a progressive Democrat. Not all that far-fetched considering the likelihood of anti Israel progressive, Zorhan Mamdani becoming the next mayor of New York.

As I keep saying, I have no answers. Only questions. Whatever side one takes, the downside is unacceptable.

A lot of people think Netanyahu has damaged Israel’s reputation forever. Even though I still think he is one of the most effective and consequential leader in Israel’s history. He has nevertheless become a lightning rod for criticism. As long as he stays in office that will continue. And probably increase. Once he is out, it is very possible that the next leader will be able to restore Israel’s good image. Despite all the negative news being reported about Israel today, all the positive contributions Israel has made to the world are still in place. With the potential for many more to come. Once the war is concluded, which will hopefully be soon, this can resume. Under a new leader that will not be associated with the tactics of the war for which Israel is so strongly now disparaged.

Netanyahu will then become the fall guy for all that Israel has been blamed for. Something he does not deserve—especially if he somehow manages to succeed in ridding Gaza of Hamas. But with what seems like the entire world increasingly branding him a war criminal, his departure from the scene will surely help restore Israel’s image.

For me this is a very unfair outcome for someone who – regardless of his many faults - has dedicated his life to the Jewish people. The irony is striking: a leader whose tactics succeeded in achieving what was once thought impossible—like the destruction of Hezbollah (which directly led to the overthrow of the Assad regime in Syria) or the dismantling of Iran’s uranium enrichment facilities - could end up as the fall guy for all of Israel’s critics in the world. Sadly, it could very well happen. It may even need to happen.

How will history judge him? We cannot know yet. That will depend, in part, on who writes the history. But it will not stop speculation. Depending on whom you ask, you will hear opposite answers. Will he be remembered as the Winston Churchill of Israel? Or as the greatest war criminal in its history? Only time will tell.

6 comments:

  1. Mahmoud Abbas, in a speech delivered via video at the United Nations (because he wasn't given a visa, joined in in the Israeli, United States and Arab League peace plan for Gaza. Netanyahu is being blamed, in effect, for not agreeing to an offer which has, so far, no realistic prospect of becoming reality.

    https://www.newser.com/story/375800/abbas-hamas-gets-no-seat-at-table-in-postwar-gaza.html

    "Despite laying out in gruesome detail the death and destruction in Gaza, Abbas said Palestinian authorities "reject" the action Hamas carried out on Oct. 7 and that it doesn't represent their people. He also laid out his vision for what government would look like in territories once the war is over, saying that the Palestinian Authority is "ready to bear full responsibility for governance and security. He added that "Hamas will have no role to play in governance" and will have to hand over their weapons to the Palestinian authorities. "There can be no justice if Palestine is not freed," Abbas said.:

    See? He's agreeing to all of the Israeli demands for the end of the war in Gaza. (the release of the hostages and the bodies of the dead ones is no doubt included.)

    All that Israel has to do is put him in charge.

    I don't think that even the most-Netanyahu demonstrators in Israel believe that this is a possible proposal - at least if not backed up by the IDF.

    Also I suppose Abbas did not talk about a 'reformed" Palestinian authority,.

    Mahmoud Abbas also wants agreement to a Palestinian state in the future.

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  2. The absolute depravity exhibited (and still is exhibited) by Hamas is not deniable. However, by Netanyahu's behavior and particularly his embrace of Smotrich and Ben Gvir, he provides the opportunity to blame Israel for an excessive response.

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  3. Abbas did call for the release of all prisoners on both sides (notably missing is any punishment of people in Hamas. He says East Jerusalem is their capital, the 1967 borders, Israel out of Gaza and Arab and international forces protect them in Gaza. A temporary period after which Gaza will be united with the West Bank.

    He also called for presidential and Parliamentary elections and a constitution and said the process of drafting a temporary constitution had already begun. and was expected to complete its work in three months. He claims he wants a modern civilian state that is free of violence, weapons and extremism and a democratic state,

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  4. In the first week of the war-the IDF sent to Bibi a 6 month plan to defeat Hamas. Vittert a News Nations Host-was a former FNC Correspondent in Jerusalem for 4 years a similar length of time in DC-very pro _)Israel and BTW BLM protestors tried to hurt because of his reporting on crime. Recently he said where is the truth discuss percent of Black men in US population and % of murders committed by black men.. He said Israel doesn't have 6 months will kill by mistake civilians and remember what Ronald Reagan did. Anyway was obvious from beginning that IDF just cares about tactical victories minimizing IIDF casualties. They never cared about foreseeable results of what a so far 2 year assault on a small area killing tens of thousands while destroying vast majority of civilian homes. Sadly, Israel has paid the price for that attitude which goes back to Ben Gurion that shouldn't care what the goyim think.

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  5. Some of the housing destruction has been very deliberate (besides the destruction to avoid booby traps) The IDF was disposed to believe that, regardless of what Netanyahu said, Hamas would continue to exist and use tunnels and so Israel created a buffer zone of destroyed buildings in the north of Gaza near the Gaza envelope.

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  6. HM, there is no way Israel will rid Gaza of all traces of Hamas. As you suggest, even if the IDF should erase all but a few disheveled pockets of Hamas resistance, the terrorist group could rebuild itself quickly with Iranian assistance as long as Gaza remains the home of Gazans. And most Gazans aren’t going anywhere else: Transplanting them en masse elsewhere in the Middle East is as unlikely to happen as the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank.

    Israel is losing the Gaza war because Netanyahu’s military strategies have failed. He’s boxed himself in a corner from which a promising negotiated settlement is impossible in the short run. The “victory” he seeks — the permanent eradication of Hamas — is unobtainable. He will keep on fighting and losing in Gaza until Israeli voters get rid of him. When that happens, realism will have a chance to fill the vacuum, allowing Israel to get back in the business of defending itself successfully.

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