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d-22131House OversightOther

Opinion piece on Israel's strategic challenges and political rhetoric

The passage offers broad geopolitical commentary without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable allegations. It mentions Bibi Netanyahu but only in a generic context, providing no concrete Describes a perceived rise in regional instability and Iran's nuclear ambitions. Claims strained US‑Israel relations and worsening ties with Europe. Notes internal social divisions within Israel.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #027859
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage offers broad geopolitical commentary without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable allegations. It mentions Bibi Netanyahu but only in a generic context, providing no concrete Describes a perceived rise in regional instability and Iran's nuclear ambitions. Claims strained US‑Israel relations and worsening ties with Europe. Notes internal social divisions within Israel.

Tags

israelgeopoliticsusisrael-relationsiran-nuclearmiddle-easthouse-oversight

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The problem for Israel, no matter who or what party is in government, is that there are risks everywhere one looks, and they show every sign of getting more, not less, serious. The “Arab Spring” has morphed into an Islamic winter. National frontiers that were put in place by British and French diplomats after the fall of the Ottoman Empire are vanishing. Centuries-old conflicts between tribes and rival religious communities have reignited. The old Cold War system of nations has given way to a world without a single geopolitical centre of gravity. Perhaps most seriously, Iran seems determined to get nuclear weapons, and, in my view, may succeed in doing so. Where Israel is concerned, relations with our indisputably most important ally, the United States, are more strained than at any time in decades. Diplomatic ties with Europe, our single largest trading partner, have been growing steadily worse. And the only real certainty is that anyone who tells you that they know absolutely where things are heading next is lying. Just ask Hosni Mubarak, who, despite having nearly half-a-million soldiers and security operatives at his disposal, was utterly blindsided, and very soon toppled and imprisoned, by an uprising that began with a sudden show of popular anger in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Internally as well, Israel faces dangers. Chief among them is the alarming erosion of the standards of civil discourse, amid the increasingly shrill, often hateful, divisions between left and right, secular and religious, rich and poor and, most seriously of all, Jews and Arabs. While we remain economically successful, the fruits of our wealth are being ever more unevenly shared, and the prospects for continued growth constrained by the lack of any visible prospect of long-term peace. Bibi Netanyahu, of course, knows all of this. Indeed, he has repeatedly spoken of the multiple threats Israel faces, not only in somber terms, but at times almost apocalyptically. That works, politically. Politicians, not just in Israel but everywhere, know that it is a lot easier to win elections on fear than on hope. Yet my own prescription — learned, as this book recounts, from years on the battlefield, then reinforced by my years in government — is that Israel must resist being guided by either of those alternatives. Not fear, certainly. But neither by simple, untempered hope. Though the stakes have become much higher since my night flight back from Camp David nearly 15 years ago, our 11

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