OPINION
THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
The Israel We Knew Is Gone
Nov. 4,
2022, 1:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/04/opinion/israel-netanyahu.html
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
Imagine you
woke up after the 2024 U.S. presidential election and found that Donald Trump
had been re-elected and chose Rudy Giuliani for attorney general, Michael Flynn
for defense secretary, Steve Bannon for commerce secretary, evangelical leader
James Dobson for education secretary, Proud Boys former leader Enrique Tarrio
for homeland security head and Marjorie Taylor Greene for the White House
spokeswoman.
“Impossible,”
you would say. Well, think again.
As I’ve
noted before, Israeli political trends are often a harbinger of wider trends in
Western democracies — Off Broadway to our Broadway. I hoped that the national
unity government that came to power in Israel in June 2021 might also be a
harbinger of more bipartisanship here. Alas, that government has now collapsed
and is being replaced by the most far-far-right coalition in Israel’s history.
Lord save us if this is a harbinger of what’s coming our way.
The
coalition that Likud leader Bibi Netanyahu is riding back into power is the
Israeli equivalent of the nightmare U.S. cabinet I imagined above. Only it is
real — a rowdy alliance of ultra-Orthodox leaders and ultranationalist
politicians, including some outright racist, anti-Arab Jewish extremists once
deemed completely outside the norms and boundaries of Israeli politics. As it
is virtually impossible for Netanyahu to build a majority coalition without the
support of these extremists, some of them are almost certain to be cabinet
ministers in the next Israeli government.
As that
previously unthinkable reality takes hold, a fundamental question will roil
synagogues in America and across the globe: “Do I support this Israel or not
support it?” It will haunt pro-Israel students on college campuses. It will
challenge Arab allies of Israel in the Abraham Accords, who just wanted to
trade with Israel and never signed up for defending a government there that is
anti-Israeli Arab. It will stress those U.S. diplomats who have reflexively
defended Israel as a Jewish democracy that shares America’s values, and it will
send friends of Israel in Congress fleeing from any reporter asking if America
should continue sending billions of dollars in aid to such a
religious-extremist-inspired government.
You have
not seen this play before, because no Israeli leader has “gone there” before.
Netanyahu
has been propelled into power by bedfellows who: see Israeli Arab citizens as a
fifth column who can’t be trusted; have vowed to take political control over
judicial appointments; believe that Jewish settlements must be expanded so
there is not an inch left anywhere in the West Bank for a Palestinian state;
want to enact judicial changes that could freeze Netanyahu’s ongoing corruption
trial; and express contempt for Israel’s long and strong embrace of L.G.B.T.Q.
rights.
We are
talking about people like Itamar Ben-Gvir, who was convicted by an Israeli
court in 2007 of incitement to racism and supporting a Jewish terrorist
organization. Netanyahu personally forged an alliance between Ben-Gvir’s Jewish
Power party and Bezalel Smotrich, the leader of the Religious Zionism party,
which turned them (shockingly for many Israelis) into the third-largest party
in the country — giving Netanyahu the allies Likud needed to win a
parliamentary majority in this week’s election.
Smotrich is
known for, among other things, suggesting that Israeli Jewish mothers should be
separated from Arab mothers in the maternity wards of Israeli hospitals. He has
long advocated outright Israeli annexation of the West Bank and argued that
there is “no such thing as Jewish terrorism” when it comes to settlers
retaliating on their own against Palestinian violence.
Netanyahu
has increasingly sought over the years to leverage the energy of this illiberal
Israeli constituency to win office, not unlike how Trump uses white nationalism,
but Netanyahu never actually brought this radical element — like Ben-Gvir, who
claims to have moderated because he has told his supporters to chant, “Death to
terrorists,” instead of, “Death to Arabs” — into his ruling faction or cabinet.
As more of Netanyahu’s allies in Likud split with him over his alleged criminal
behavior and lying, however, Bibi had to reach further and further out of the
mainstream of Israeli politics to get enough votes to rule and pass a law to
abort his own trial and possible jail time.
Netanyahu
had fertile political soil to work with, the Yediot Ahronot Israeli newspaper
columnist Nahum Barnea explained to me. There has been a dramatic upsurge in
violence — stabbings, shootings, gang warfare and organized crime — by Israeli
Arabs against other Israeli Arabs, and Israeli Arab gangs and organized crime
against Israeli Jews, particularly in mixed communities. The result is that,
“like in America, ‘policing’ has become a huge issue in Israel in recent
years,” said Barnea — and even though this upsurge started when Netanyahu was
previously prime minister, he and his anti-Arab allies blamed it all on the
Arabs and the national unity Israeli government.
One
election billboard summed up Netanyahu’s campaign. It was, as Haaretz reporter
Amos Harel reported, a “gloomy-looking one with the caption: ‘That’s it. We’ve
had enough.’ It depicts outgoing Prime Minister Yair Lapid and his coalition
partner, Mansour Abbas of the United Arab List.”
Abbas is
the rather amazing Israeli Arab religious party leader who recognizes the State
of Israel and the searing importance of the Holocaust, and who was part of the
now-fallen unity government.
As Harel
put it: “The ‘had enough’ message seems to have sunk in among supporters of
Likud, Religious Zionism and the ultra-Orthodox parties. It’s likely that the
message also helped Netanyahu win Tuesday’s election.” Among the critical
factors, Harel wrote, was “hatred of Arabs and the desire to keep them out of
positions of power.”
But
Netanyahu was also aided by the fact that while the right and the far right
were highly energized by both growing fears of and distrust of Arabs — whether
Israeli Arab citizens or Palestinians in the West Bank — their centrist and
center-left opponents had no coherent or inspiring countermessage.
As Barnea
put it to me: “Israel is not divided down the middle,” with 50 percent being
pro-Netanyahu and the other 50 percent with a unified message and strategy
opposing him. “No, Israel is divided between the 50 percent who are
pro-Netanyahu and the 50 percent who are pro-blocking Netanyahu. But that is
all they can agree on,” Barnea said. And it showed in this election. And it
wasn’t enough.
Why is all
of this so dangerous? Moshe Halbertal, the Hebrew University Jewish
philosopher, captured it well: For decades members of the Israeli right, a vast
majority of whom were “security hawks,” have believed that the Palestinians
have never and will never accept a Jewish state next to them and therefore
Israel needed to take whatever military means were necessary to protect itself
from them.
But Israeli
hawkishness toward the Palestinians, explained Halbertal, “is now morphing into
something new — a kind of general ultranationalism” that not only rejects any
notion of a Palestinian state but also views every Israeli Arab — who make up
about 21 percent of Israel’s population, nearly 20 percent of its doctors,
about 25 percent of its nurses and almost half its pharmacists — as a potential
terrorist.
“What we
are seeing is a shift in the hawkish right from a political identity built on
focusing on the ‘enemy outside’ — the Palestinians — to the ‘enemy inside’ —
Israeli Arabs,” Halbertal said.
Netanyahu’s
coalition has also attacked the vital independent institutions that underpin
Israel’s democracy and are responsible for, among other things, protecting
minority rights. That is, the lower court system, the media and, most of all,
the Supreme Court, which Netanyahu and his allies want brought under the
political control of the right, “precisely so they will not protect minority
rights” with the vigor and scope that they have, Halbertal said.
At the same
time, not only is this election a struggle about the future of Israel, he said,
but also “about the future of Judaism in Israel. The Torah stands for the
equality of all people and the notion that we are all created in God’s image.
Israelis of all people need to respect minority rights because we, as Jews, know
what it is to be a minority” — with and without rights. “This is a deep Jewish
ethos,” Halbertal added, “and it is now being challenged from within Israel
itself. But, when you have these visceral security threats in the street every
day, it becomes much easier for these ugly ideologies to anchor themselves.”
This is
going to have a profound effect on U.S.-Israel relations. But don’t take my
word for it. On Oct. 1, Axios published a story quoting what sources said
Senator Bob Menendez, the New Jersey Democrat who leads the Foreign Relations
Committee, told Netanyahu during a trip to Israel in September. In the words of
one source, the senator warned that if Netanyahu formed a government after the
Nov. 1 elections that included right-wing extremists, it could “seriously erode
bipartisan support in Washington.”
That is now
about to happen.
I have
reported from Israel for this newspaper for nearly 40 years, often traveling
around with my dear friend Nahum Barnea, one of the most respected, sober,
balanced, careful journalists in the country. To hear him say to me minutes ago
on the phone that “we have a different kind of Israel now” tells me we are
truly entering a dark tunnel.
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