NEWS
ANALYSIS
Isolated and Defiant, Israel Vows to ‘Stand
Alone’ in War on Hamas
As the death toll in Gaza has risen, countries have
turned their backs on Israel. The consequences of those desertions, from
security to economics, risk turning Israel into a pariah.
Damien Cave
By Damien
Cave
Reporting
from Tel Aviv and Safed, Israel
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/11/world/middleeast/isolated-israel-war-hamas.html
May 11,
2024, 5:03 a.m. ET
Turkey has
suspended trade with Israel. The world’s top court is considering whether
Israeli leaders have committed genocide. Protests have overtaken cities and
campuses worldwide. Ireland and Spain say they will recognize Palestine as a
state by the end of the month.
Even the
United States — long Israel’s closest ally and benefactor — is threatening for
the first time since the war began to withhold certain arms shipments.
Seven
months after much of the world pledged its support to Israel following a
Hamas-led terrorist attack, the country finds itself increasingly isolated.
With a war that has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians and left Gaza on the
verge of famine, any international good will that Israel amassed on Oct. 7 has
been all but lost.
Of greatest
concern to Israel: splintering relations with the United States. President
Biden, once quiet about his expectations that Israel limit civilian deaths and
increase access to humanitarian aid, has become more vocal amid partisan
political pressure in an election year. This week, Mr. Biden said the United
States was withholding delivery of 3,500 high-payload bombs.
His warning
on Wednesday that the pause could extend to more weapons was his greatest break
yet with Israel’s government. It suggested that the outrage coursing through
capitals and campuses would continue to spread, and it has. On Friday, in a
largely symbolic gesture, the United Nations General Assembly backed
Palestine’s bid for U.N. membership, and thousands of demonstrators in Sweden
protested against Israel’s participation in the Eurovision Song Contest on
Saturday.
“If we need
to stand alone,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel said Thursday,
both acknowledging and seeking to defy his country’s growing isolation, “we
will stand alone.”
The
backlash, which also extends to Israeli athletes and academics facing boycotts
and protests, has stunned and confused Israelis, who are still reeling from
Hamas’s October attacks and mostly see the war as justified. Many blame
unchecked antisemitism and American party politics for Israel’s isolation.
Others struggle to parse reasonable critique from selective virtue signaling.
They ask why more attention is not paid to Israeli victims, and why there are
no protests against China’s persecution of Uyghurs or Russia’s brutal invasion
of Ukraine.
“The
demonstrations on American campuses, they don’t call for peace, they don’t call
for an independent Palestinian state or a two-state solution,” said Eytan
Gilboa, an expert on U.S.-Israel relations. “They call for the elimination of
Israel.”
“It’s the
slow-motion formation of a pariah state,” said Alon Pinkas, a former Israeli
diplomat.
But the
complex, layered reproof from around the world cannot be ignored as just the
whims of anti-Israel activists. Israel is facing real consequences, from
security to economics.
And while
the isolation is partly a byproduct of how Israel has prosecuted the war,
analysts and former officials say it also reflects international frustration
with the government’s restrictions on food aid, a shift in global politics that
has pushed Israel down the priority list and the Israeli public’s narrow focus
on its own pain.
Israel has
endured the world’s glare before, shrugging off frequent criticism at the U.N.
and an Arab boycott that lasted decades. Though Israel governs a spit of land
no bigger than Maryland, it has always had a centripetal pull, placing its wars
at the emotional center of global politics. But this is not 1948, 1967, 1973,
1982, 2006 or 2014 — years with previous conflicts.
Before Oct.
7, most of Israel’s allies in the West were focused on Ukraine’s fight with
Russia and the challenge of a more assertive China. The Middle East had largely
fallen off the radar. Climate change was driving a retreat from oil. Israel and
Saudi Arabia were openly discussing normalized relations even as Israel’s
democracy had become more polarized and parochial.
Mr. Biden’s
first response was complete solidarity: “My administration’s support for
Israel’s security is rock solid and unwavering,” he said on the day of the
attacks. Other world leaders followed suit. The Israeli flag and its colors
were projected on the Brandenburg Gate, 10 Downing Street and the Sydney Opera
House.
Yet even as
horrific details of Hamas’s murders and mutilation sowed nightmares, there were
signs of concern about the government of Mr. Netanyahu and its absolutist
approach.
Mr.
Netanyahu’s promise to “demolish Hamas” struck many military strategists as too
broad to be effective. And when Israeli forces began to pummel Gaza’s crowded
cities with huge bombs, toppling buildings on families along with militants,
support for Israel weakened.
Washington
had been warning Israel to better protect civilians. Israel continued bombing.
The United States and other countries pushed Israel to create corridors for
aid. They demanded a plan for governing Gaza after the fighting. Israel
intensified its assault on a territory roughly the size of Philadelphia,
densely packed with two million people, many of them children, while keeping
out most independent journalists, leaving image sharing to those under attack.
The results
were dire: By late November, people were being killed in Gaza more quickly,
according to experts, than in even the deadliest moments of the American-led
attacks in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, which were widely criticized by human
rights groups.
Less than
two months in, Israel was losing support in Europe and the United States —
before student protests escalated into clashes with the police, before calls
for divestment, before polling showed the war’s unpopularity affecting Mr.
Biden’s chances for re-election.
After seven
aid workers, many of them foreigners, from the World Central Kitchen were
killed on April 1 and with children in Gaza dying of starvation, words like
“genocide” and “evil” became more commonly applied to the campaign that Israel
insisted was simply self-defense.
“The poor
and impoverished people of Palestine were sentenced to death by Israel’s
bombs,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey said on Thursday, when he
announced that his country, once Israel’s closest Muslim partner, would suspend
trade.
Nimrod
Novik, a former senior Israeli official and an analyst at the Israel Policy
Forum, said there was no denying the government ignored both a moral and
political imperative by pursuing a “stingy approach” to aid and a war plan with
no vision for peace.
“Our
government policy failed to live up to its claim that our war is with Hamas,
not the Palestinian people,” Mr. Novik said.
The
military says aid is slowed by security measures intended to restrict weapons
smuggling. On Sunday, Hamas attacked one of the few border crossings from which
aid is permitted to enter, killing four Israeli soldiers.
For many,
it was a reminder that the context of Israeli life is still colored by the
country’s own suffering. What Israelis discuss at dinner are friends called up
to fight. What they see are cities and towns covered with the portraits of
hostages unreturned, apps sending alerts for regular rocket attacks from
Hezbollah along the northern border, and graffiti in Tel Aviv that reads,
“Hamas = ISIS.”
“There is a
total disconnect between how Israelis view the situation and how the world
does,” Mr. Novik said. “Mentally, we are not in the seventh month since Oct. 7.
Mentally, we are in Oct. 8.”
Many
Israelis believe the international community is willfully ignoring their
plight, with soldiers dying and groups widely viewed as terrorists firing on
the country. In northern Israel, more than 100,000 people have been displaced
from their homes by regular rocket fire. Children are not in school. Deep
inside Israel’s borders, air-raid sirens pierce daily routines.
Genine
Barel, a New Yorker who moved to Israel in the ’90s and now lives in Safed, the
home of Kabbalah, or mystical Judaism, said it hurts to lose international
sympathy.
“It would
be bad enough if we were just going through this war, and the losses and the
heartbreak,” she said, sitting in the empty restaurant of the hotel she owns
with her husband where business has completely dried up. “But we are being
vilified at the same time.”
“It’s as if
you’re being picked on,” she added, “and accused of being a bully at the same
time.”
Nathalie
Rozens, 37, an actor and writer who grew up in Europe, said the discussion
within Israel about the war had evolved to include more criticism. (A poll
published Friday showed declining trust in Israel’s military leadership since
March.) But outside the country, she said, Israelis are flattened into
caricatures.
In her
view, Israel’s critics fail to understand its nuances, that this is a place
where many people loathe Mr. Netanyahu and lament the killing of innocents in
Gaza, but have a sibling fighting there and are just two generations from the
Holocaust’s attempted destruction of global Jewry.
Banning
Israeli artists from festivals, protesting singers at Eurovision, refusing to
fund Israeli films — “the pressure, in a way, hits the wrong people,” she said.
“I don’t
feel aligned with this government and I’m Israeli,” she said. “There is no
space for my voice inside the country and also not abroad.”
However
dangerous Hamas or Hezbollah might be, many believe dwindling U.S. support for
Israel would be far more catastrophic for the country. Israel needs America as
a patron, and this government has “no patience, no consideration, no
understanding of Israel’s status in the world,” said Nahum Barnea, a veteran
columnist for Yedioth Ahronoth, an Israeli daily newspaper. “So they choose to
ignore it.”
Total
isolation still seems a long way off. Israel is not North Korea. Mr. Biden has
said he would keep Israel supplied with defensive weapons, and Republicans have
sided even more strongly with Israel. However, according to many international
analysts, what Israelis want to see as a tremor may become a fault line as
agitation with Israel continues to build.
“They’ve
lost the young people,” said Ian Bremmer, an adjunct professor of international
and public affairs at Columbia and the president of Eurasia Group, a political
risk consultancy. “They weren’t around and don’t know the Holocaust. What they
see is an incredibly powerful Israel that is engaging in a war for seven months
and is indifferent to the suffering of the Palestinians.”
Johnatan
Reiss contributed reporting.
Damien Cave
is an international correspondent for The Times, covering the Indo-Pacific
region. He is based in Sydney, Australia. More about Damien Cave

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