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53734


Date: April 11, 2024 at 03:46:05
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war

URL: https://www.972mag.com/netanyahu-prolonging-war-new-normal/


Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war

A broad coalition of political forces, from Israel's far right to the Zionist left,
have differing motivations for turning the war into the new normal.

By Menachem Klein April 9, 2024
An Israeli soldier walks past a wall of photographs of Israelis still held
hostage in Gaza, at "Hostage Square" in Tel Aviv, March 10, 2024. (Miriam
Alster/FLASH90)
In partnership with

For most Israelis, the war has become routine. They’ve learned to live with it.
It’s uncomfortable, they think, but there’s no other choice.

Of course, not everyone shares in this sense of complacency — the
bereaved, the survivors, the wounded, the evacuees, and the families of
those still held hostage in Gaza. And, of course, Israel’s Palestinian citizens,
many of whom have lost friends or relatives in the besieged Strip, and have
watched in horror as their Jewish neighbors and colleagues justify Israel’s
brutal onslaught. These victims of the war struggle against the new normal,
but their success is limited.

The weekly demonstrations for the release of the remaining hostages may
have stepped up a gear in the past couple of weeks, with an outburst of rage
toward Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over his apparent foot-dragging
in negotiations for a ceasefire and hostage-exchange deal. But these
protests still pale in comparison to last year’s demonstrations against the
right-wing government’s judicial overhaul, the 2020 protests against
Netanyahu, and the 2011 protests against the surging cost of living. All the
while, Israel appears to be pushing ahead with its offensive in Gaza — paying
no heed to the International Court of Justice or the UN Security Council —
and perhaps even angling for a broader regional escalation, at least on the
northern front with Hezbollah, following its attack on the Iranian Embassy in
Damascus at the start of the month.

This new normal, which for now seems impossible to break through, did not
appear out of nowhere. Rather, it is actively being produced, every single day,
by those who have an interest in maintaining it — a broad coalition of
individuals and groups each with distinct motivations.

Let’s start with the defense minister, Yoav Gallant, and the senior military
leaders. They know full well that reserve units cannot be mobilized
indefinitely, and they are clear-eyed about the hit that Israel’s carefully
curated reputation is taking in the international community as a result of the
way it is prosecuting the war. But they also understand that as long as the
war continues, there will be no public pressure on them to take responsibility
for the grave failures that led to October 7. If they can notch a few victories in
the war, perhaps, they hope, they will not go down in history as the worst
leaders Israel ever had. So they talk about a war that will last for years.

It is well documented that Netanyahu is motivated by a similar logic. As long
as the country is at war, he will remain at the helm and be able to delay or
even cancel his long-awaited corruption trial — so why bother ending it?

For his coalition partners, the new normal is a blessing. The far-right
Religious Zionist Party and Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power), led by Bezalel
Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir respectively, see the war as a way of life and as
an application of their core political principles: the expansion of Jewish
supremacy and the crushing of Palestinian nationalism. The ultra-Orthodox,
meanwhile, connect to the far-right parties’ messianic euphoria through the
religious notion of Jewish “chosenness.” But they also have a financial
incentive for continuing to support the war: Smotrich, in his capacity as
finance minister, recently allocated a hefty government budget to the ultra-
Orthodox parties in order to buy their loyalty.

Even the Biden administration is normalizing the war. Biden refuses to push
for a permanent ceasefire, or to pressure Israel to end its operation in the
Strip. The American abstention from the recent Security Council resolution
calling for an immediate ceasefire was hardly a full-throated endorsement of
the proposal — not least when the U.S. Ambassador to the UN immediately
sought to dismiss it. Biden has repeatedly expressed concern about the lack
of Israeli plans to protect Palestinian civilians and humanitarian aid workers —
especially in the event of a Rafah invasion — and pressed Israel on its vision
for the “day after,” but refuses to say enough is enough.

Moreover, Biden has created a division of labor for him and Netanyahu: the
U.S. alleviates some of the plight of civilians in Gaza with aid drops, while
Israel attacks and continues to starve them. Biden also hasn’t presented his
own proposal for the “day after,” instead gesturing at a vague process at the
end of which, somehow, lies a two-state solution. Netanyahu delights in the
vagueness of the suggestion and emphasizes its infeasibility.

Standing awkwardly on the sidelines are the Israeli center and the Zionist left.
They have always been exemplars of Israeli militarism, if not the military’s
very leaders. They are therefore unable to oppose this militarism, especially
in wartime, despite their alarm at the religious-Zionist takeover of Israel’s
security forces.

Before the war, few of them concerned themselves with the plight of the
Palestinians besieged inside the Gaza Strip, or even advocated negotiating a
political agreement with the Palestinian Authority (PA). The vast majority of
them agreed fully with Netanyahu’s policy of “managing the conflict,” and
they, too, ignored Hamas’ willingness to move toward a united front with the
PA, as shown by its 2017 “General Principles and Policies” document that
effectively recognized the Oslo Accords as an established fact, and its 2021
agreement with PA President Mahmoud Abbas on holding general elections.
Since October 7, what little enthusiasm existed on the Zionist left and center
for a political agreement with the Palestinians has been entirely quashed.

In the typical style of Israel’s center-left governments between the 1950s and
1980s, especially that of the self-righteous Golda Meir, they say they are
sorry for the Palestinian suffering, “but we have no choice.” They barely
mention military and settler brutality and ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in
the West Bank and Jerusalem. And, of course, they strongly oppose the
cases being brought against Israel in The Hague. The result is an updated
version of “conflict management” — one that, despite their other differences,
unites virtually all currents of Israeli politics.

‘A mass assassination factory’: Inside Israel’s calculated bombing of Gaza
Palestinians at the site of a destroyed home from an Israeli air strike in Rafah,
in the southern Gaza Strip, March 22, 2024. (Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash90)
Even without a UN veto, Gaza remains hostage to American power
What could shift this reality of war as routine, for better or for worse? I see
three possibilities, which are not mutually exclusive.

The first is a radical Israeli move in Lebanon or an invasion of Rafah, which
could come as a result of an uncontrollable local escalation or Israeli
miscalculation. The second possibility is an American decision to demand a
permanent ceasefire, together with an international military coalition that
would replace the Israeli military presence in the Gaza Strip. And the third
option is the awakening of Israel’s industrial-business sector, for whom the
war is not routine but rather a serious disruption to business-as-usual.
Politically and socially, this sector is located both on the political right and the
center. It oiled the wheels of protest against the judicial overhaul, and, if
activated, could bring about a new round of elections and a subsequent
change in the war’s prosecution.

A version of this article was first published in Hebrew on Local Call. Read it
here.

October 2023 war
Benjamin Netanyahu
Joe Biden
far-right
Zionist Left
ultra-Orthodox Jews
Local Call
Menachem Klein is professor of Political Science at Bar Ilan University. He
was an advisor to the Israeli delegation in negotiations with the PLO in 2000
and was one of the leaders of the Geneva Initiative. His latest book, Arafat
and Abbas: Portraits of Leadership in a State Postponed, was published by
Hurst London and Oxford University Press New York.


Responses:
[53739] [53736] [53738] [53744] [53748] [53753] [53743] [53747]


53739


Date: April 11, 2024 at 09:14:29
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war

URL: https://www.cnn.com/2022/11/07/middleeast/netanyahu-election-threshhold-mime-intl/index.html



"If all the votes for the parties in the outgoing
Knesset are counted, Netanyahu and his allies come out
less than 40,000 votes ahead of their opponents, out of
more than 4.7 million votes cast." (2002)

Hamas won 44% to 41% over the more moderate party in
2006.

Voting counts, as long as the count is honest. Another
party in either place may have been the difference for
millions.



Responses:
None


53736


Date: April 11, 2024 at 06:39:16
From: shatterbrain , [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war


Look, the genocidal war is nothing personal. It's just simply plain all about business. Or as the Godfather four fingered Rahm Emanuel once put it:

"You never let a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it's an opportunity to do things you think you could not do before."


Responses:
[53738] [53744] [53748] [53753] [53743] [53747]


53738


Date: April 11, 2024 at 08:45:01
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war



Wow.

Taking a perfectly innocuous comment "an opportunity to
do things you think you could not do before."
spoken by a Jewish person and
tying it to a genocide
by association of subject...

Pretty fine misdirected propaganda ploy.
Pozdravlyayu.


Responses:
[53744] [53748] [53753] [53743] [53747]


53744


Date: April 11, 2024 at 16:40:09
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: wow, incredibly dishonest


you extracted part of the quote, taking it completely out of context and used
it to insinuate scatterbrain's post was antisemitic because the person who
made the statement happens to be jewish. Seriously, shame on you.

"You never let a serious crisis go to waste. And what I mean by that it's an
opportunity to do things you think you could not do before."

Rahm Emanuel

and scatterbrain's post was on point, 100%


Responses:
[53748] [53753]


53748


Date: April 11, 2024 at 19:28:18
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: wow,

URL: https://opexsociety.org/body-of-knowledge/never-let-a-serious-crisis-go-to-waste/




The complete quote had to do with the recession of
2008.

"Do Not Waste This Crisis
by Stewart D. Friedman
November 25, 2008
President-Elect Obama’s chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel,
recently said: “You never want a serious crisis to go
to waste. And what I mean by that is an opportunity to
do things you think you could not do before.” Emanuel–
using a phrase of which Tom Friedman (no relation) is
also fond (he heard it from economist Paul Romer)–was
talking about how governments must take advantage of
our current economic crisis. But the same idea applies
to each of us, as individuals and as business leaders."


A serious crisis *does* call for new thinking and if
you ask me the way the war in Gaza as progressed is due
to outmoded war tactics resulting in a waste of
resources and life. But that was not what was
intended.

Of course, this is a discussion forum, and if I
misinterpreted a post then it is not the first time or
would it be the first apology.


Responses:
[53753]


53753


Date: April 12, 2024 at 05:22:02
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: 'if'?(NT)


(NT)


Responses:
None


53743


Date: April 11, 2024 at 12:10:10
From: shatterbrain, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war

URL: Henry Kissinger's Cambodia legacy of bombs and chaos


Kissinger was another gawdam bastard.


Responses:
[53747]


53747


Date: April 11, 2024 at 19:10:51
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Netanyahu isn’t the only one interested in prolonging the war




I absolutely agree with your characterization of
Kissinger. And cold blooded mass killings appear to
have been a business practice for him. In
conversations about genocide he must have at least a
dishonorable mention.



Responses:
None


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