Every defiant word from Benjamin Netanyahu at the United Nations can be understood as part of a calculated gambit: alienate the world to win at home. His speech was a masterwork of rhetoric designed for his domestic political survival, even at the cost of catastrophic damage to Israel’s international standing.
Calling 157 nations “insane” for recognizing Palestine is not a strategy to win friends abroad; it’s a signal of strength to a right-wing base that views the world with suspicion. Vowing to “finish the job” in Gaza against global condemnation reinforces his image as a tough, uncompromising security leader.
Even his claim of secret praise from world leaders serves a domestic purpose, suggesting he is a shrewd statesman who understands the world’s hypocrisy better than his critics. He transforms international isolation from a weakness into a badge of honor.
This strategy is fraught with risk. The economic, military, and diplomatic consequences of becoming a pariah state could be severe. But for a leader focused on his political present, the short-term gains of rallying his base may outweigh the long-term dangers of a world that has turned its back.
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