Israel was carved out of the moral conscience of the world. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, the state of Israel was projected not merely as a homeland for the Jews, but as a moral enterprise – a sanctuary built on the principles of justice, memory, and survival. For decades, it positioned itself as a beacon of democracy, innovation, and judicial independence in a region marred by authoritarianism and monarchy. But the ongoing war on Gaza under Benjamin Netanyahu’s leadership has shredded that narrative threadbare. The very state that once emerged as a symbol of hope for the persecuted has now become a tormentor, replicating – if not exceeding in some cases – the brutalities once committed against its own ancestors.
Over the past two years, Israel’s war machine has turned Gaza into a graveyard. According to UN and independent humanitarian agencies, more than 38,000 Palestinians have been killed, including over 15,000 children and women. Hospitals have been bombed, schools reduced to rubble, UN shelters have come under fire, and entire residential blocks flattened with families buried under debris. Gaza’s water infrastructure has been destroyed, leaving 90% of the population without access to clean drinking water. Homes, mosques, churches, and markets – nothing has been spared. A once-bustling coastal strip has been turned into an open-air inferno.
What is most grotesque is the way these atrocities have been justified – not as military errors, but as strategic necessity. Netanyahu, under the banner of Israeli security, has waged this war not just to defeat Hamas, but to erase Gaza as a viable Palestinian entity. It is no longer Israel’s war for survival; it has become Netanyahu’s war for political survival. After the devastating failure of October 7, when Hamas fighters stormed into southern Israel in the deadliest attack the state has ever seen, Netanyahu’s leadership came under unprecedented criticism. With his approval ratings plummeting and corruption trials looming, he has stoked nationalist fervor and embarked on a path of total annihilation of Gaza as a means of salvaging his own career.
In this context, Israel is no longer behaving like a state governed by democratic norms. It has metastasized into an Improvised Explosive Device – unpredictable, dangerous, and devastatingly destructive. What was once lauded for its high-tech innovation and independent judiciary now exports drones and bombs more prolifically than ideas or values. The collective punishment of Palestinians is no longer a tragic byproduct of war – it is the strategy.
The international community’s response has ranged from handwringing to complicity. The United States, Israel’s closest ally and largest arms supplier, continues to provide diplomatic cover and military aid, despite mounting evidence of war crimes. Washington has repeatedly vetoed UN resolutions calling for a ceasefire, undermining its own credibility as a promoter of human rights and the international rules-based order. Unless the U.S. administration decouples its support for Israeli security from uncritical endorsement of Netanyahu’s genocide, it will bear co-responsibility for the moral collapse of the Israeli state.
Beyond the United States, the world community bears a heavy responsibility. The United Nations, whose charter enshrines the prevention of genocide and the protection of civilian populations, cannot remain an impotent observer. States that recognise Israel and maintain diplomatic, economic, and military ties must use their leverage to dissuade and prevent further atrocities – by conditioning relations on adherence to humanitarian law, halting arms sales, and suspending preferential trade agreements. Civil society movements across continents must continue to mobilise public opinion through protests, campaigns, and advocacy, while independent media must persist in exposing the scale and intent of the destruction in Gaza. If all else fails, the only language that may compel change is coordinated international sanctions – economic, political, and cultural – aimed at isolating Israel’s leadership until it ceases its genocidal policies. Inaction is not neutrality; in the face of systematic slaughter, it is complicity.
So how can Netanyahu be stopped? The answer lies not in military confrontation but in political and economic pressure. The U.S. must impose red lines and tie its aid to compliance with international humanitarian law. Israel’s access to global trade, technology, and institutions must be conditioned on the cessation of hostilities and meaningful steps toward a political settlement. International courts must proceed with investigations into war crimes, and civil society across the world must continue to document, resist, and protest the erasure of a people.
The critical question now is: What will Israel become once this war ends? The cost is not only the lives destroyed in Gaza but the very soul of Israel as a political entity. A state cannot claim legitimacy through democratic rhetoric while committing undemocratic and inhumane acts. Morally, Israel has unraveled. Legally, it is approaching pariah status. And strategically, it is more insecure than ever, having ensured that generations of Palestinians – and indeed much of the Arab and Muslim world – will see it not as a legitimate state, but as a violent occupier.
Israel will continue to exist, but at what cost? If it survives only through walls, bombs, and brutal suppression, it will have traded its moral foundations for perpetual warfare. And in doing so, it will have transformed from a sanctuary for the persecuted into a source of persecution itself.
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