Opinion
Thomas L.
Friedman
How Netanyahu Played Trump for a Fool in Gaza
July 29,
2025
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/29/opinion/gaza-netanyahu-trump-israel-starvation.html
Opinion
Columnist
On July
26 the Israeli newspaper Haaretz ran this headline: “Israel at War Day 659.
Gaza Medical Sources: At Least 25 Killed by Israeli Gunfire, Some While Waiting
for Aid.”
If you
had been following this Gaza story closely, you would know that Haaretz was
running a similar headline almost every day for weeks — only the number of
Palestinians killed while waiting for food aid handed out by Israel in Gaza
changed. As I watched these stories pile up, the thought occurred to me that
roughly a month earlier Israel had managed to assassinate 10 senior Iranian
military officials and 16 nuclear scientists sitting in their homes and
offices. So how was it that Israel had the capacity to destroy pinpoint targets
in Iran, some 1,200 miles from Tel Aviv, and could not safely deliver boxes of
food to starving Gazans 40 miles from Tel Aviv?
That did
not seem like an accident. It seemed like the product of something deeper,
something quite shameful, playing out within the extremist government of Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Key figures in Bibi’s extreme-right ruling
coalition, like the national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, openly pushed
a policy that would result in the starvation of many Gazans — to the point
where they would leave the strip entirely. Bibi knew the United States wouldn’t
let him go that far, so he provided just the bare minimum of aid to prevent
being toppled by the Jewish supremacist thugs he’d brought into his government.
Alas,
that turned out to be a little too bare, and terrible pictures of malnourished
children started emerging from Gaza, prompting even President Trump to declare
on Monday that there is “real starvation stuff” happening in Gaza. “You can’t
fake that. We have to get the kids fed.”
How did
we get here, where a Jewish democratic state, descended in part from the
Holocaust, is engaged in a policy of starvation in a war with Hamas that has
become the longest and most deadly war between Israelis and Palestinians in
Israel’s history — and shows no sign of ending?
My
answer: What makes this war different is that it pits what I believe is the
worst, most fanatical and amoral government in Israel’s history against the
worst, most fanatical, murderous organization in Palestinian history.
But they
are alike not just in the awfulness of their goals — each seeking to wipe out
the other to control all the territory from the Jordan River to the
Mediterranean Sea. They are also guided by leaders who have consistently
prioritized their own political survival and ideological obsessions over the
basic well-being of their own people — not to mention the interests of the
United States.
You may
have noticed that this war has no generally accepted name — like the Six-Day
War, the Sinai War or the October War. Well, I personally have always had a
name for it. It’s the War of the Worst.
This is
the first Israeli-Palestinian war where the worst leaders on both sides are
calling all the shots. The moderate Israeli opposition parties and the
Palestinian Authority in the West Bank have no influence. And that is why I
cannot tell you how or when it will end. Because Netanyahu still insists on
“total victory” over Hamas, which he will never achieve, and the Hamas
leadership still insists on surviving this war in order to still control Gaza
the morning after, which it does not deserve.
Let’s go
to the videotape: For months Hamas has been fully aware of the acute food and
housing shortage in Gaza — shortages it helped trigger by launching a savage
attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, without any plan for the morning after other
than to kill as many Jews as it could and with no strategy to protect civilians
in Gaza from what Hamas knew would be a savage Israeli retaliation. For months
now Hamas has also known that if it released its Israeli hostages, agreed that
its leadership would leave Gaza and invited an Arab peacekeeping force blessed
by the Palestinian Authority to run Gaza instead of Hamas, the suffering of
Gazans would stop immediately.
But Hamas
refuses to do that. It not only wants to keep control of Gaza after any
cease-fire; it also wants the United States to guarantee its safety from a
resumption of Israeli attacks if and when it gives up the last Israeli
hostages, whom Hamas has stashed in tunnels and elsewhere for more than 21
months. This is a sick, twisted organization that bears huge responsibility for
the suffering in Gaza.
But what
too many people still have not grasped is just how sick this current Israeli
government is. Too many American officials, lawmakers and Jews keep trying to
tell themselves that this is simply another right-wing Israeli government, but
just a little more right. Wrong.
As I have
argued since my column on Nov. 4, 2022, the morning after this Israeli
government was elected, which was titled “The Israel We Knew Is Gone,” this
Israeli government is uniquely awful.
It has
empowered the likes of Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who suggested last
year that blocking humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip is “justified and moral”
even if it causes two million civilians to die of hunger, but that the
international community won’t allow him to. “We bring in aid because there is
no choice,” Smotrich told a conference hosted by the right-wing Israel Hayom
newspaper. “We can’t, in the current global reality, manage a war. Nobody will
let us cause two million civilians to die of hunger, even though it might be
justified and moral, until our hostages are returned.”
This
language is worth parsing, because it goes to the core of what Netanyahu has
done to Israel. He has brought into the halls of power people like Smotrich,
representatives of a dark, long-repressed minority strain in Jewish history.
There has been a deep struggle in the Jewish tradition between those who
believe that all humans are created in the image of God, and therefore there is
something called “humanity” — and that part of the Jewish covenant with God
involves protecting all of humanity — and a minority view that argues there is
no humanity, per se; there is just “us” and “them.” For the Jewish people to
survive and thrive in this region, according to this line of thought, Jews must
overcome their humanism, not be guided by it.
This
minority strain of thinking has always been there, but it had never been given
the power it has today. It has never been allowed to direct Israel’s huge
advanced war machine. This is Bibi’s unique contribution. He has not only
empowered the worst of the worst in Israel but also simultaneously sought to
unshackle them from the rule of law. He has engaged in a nonstop campaign to
strip power from Israel’s independent, ethical gatekeepers, like the former
heads of the Shin Bet security service and the Israeli Army. As I write,
Netanyahu is trying to oust Israel’s high-integrity, independent attorney
general, after a two-year campaign to undermine the oversight powers of
Israel’s Supreme Court, precisely to do something no Israeli government has
ever done: formally annex the West Bank, if not Gaza, too — and push out as
many Palestinians as possible — without any legal restraints.
Trump and
his Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, have never understood this. They think
that everyone is just as transactional as they are — whether it’s Vladimir
Putin or Netanyahu — and that deep down everyone wants “peace” first and
foremost and not “a piece” of Ukraine or “a piece” of the West Bank or Gaza.
That is how Bibi and Putin have, each in their own way, managed to play Trump
and Witkoff for fools for so long.
What is
an example of that? In January, Israel and Hamas agreed to a three-phase
cease-fire deal that involved a hostage exchange and a prisoner swap. But Trump
and Witkoff let Netanyahu unilaterally break the cease-fire in March, before
the last two phases could be negotiated. Bibi cited Hamas’s refusal to meet
Israel’s demand to release more hostages before negotiations would resume —
even though Hamas was never obligated to do so in Phase 1 of the U.S.-brokered
deal.
An
analysis by Amir Tibon in Haaretz this week headlined “How Trump Facilitated
Netanyahu’s Gaza Starvation Policy and Failed to Bring the Hostages Home”
argued that there was no military rationale for Bibi to restart the war because
Hamas as a military force had been defeated.
It was
all to serve Bibi’s political needs. Smotrich and the other extremists
effectively told Bibi he had to restart the war or be toppled, and Bibi duped
Trump and Witkoff into believing he could free the hostages with harsher
military blows on Hamas and more hardship for Gazan civilians, and by confining
the population to a small corner of the strip.
It all
turned out to be wrong. Hamas was not defeated, and when Israel eventually had
to resume supplying food through its distribution organization, the Gaza
Humanitarian Foundation, it was so bungled that countless Gazans were dying
each day swarming the Israeli distribution sites.
Hamas,
Tibon noted, having seen “that Netanyahu’s blockade and starvation strategy had
become a P.R. disaster for Israel, raised its demands in the ongoing hostage
negotiations.” The bottom line, he concluded, is this: “Netanyahu dragged Trump
and Witkoff into adopting a failed policy — one that returned no living
hostages, cost the lives of nearly 50 Israeli soldiers since the war was
resumed in March, led to the deaths of thousands of Palestinian civilians and
precipitated a full-blown humanitarian disaster. The consequences of this
failure will haunt Israel for years.”
Alas, it
will haunt Palestinians as well, because I fear it has improved the chances
that Hamas will come out of this war without having to cede power in Gaza. Bibi
and Hamas have been tacitly enabling each other’s political survival for
decades. It is quite possible that this disastrous war will end with both of
them still in power.
If that
is the case, say goodbye to any two-state solution and hello to a forever war.
Because, to paraphrase the philosopher Immanuel Kant, out of the crooked timber
of Bibi and Hamas no straight thing will ever be made.
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