Even earlier than the US presidential election polls had closed on Tuesday evening, Israel’s far-right Nationwide Safety Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir had taken to Twitter, posting “Yesssss” in English, whereas including emojis of a flexing bicep and pictures of the Israeli and American flags.
Yesssss 💪🏻🇮🇱🇺🇸 https://t.co/kPqkYI3PDP
— איתמר בן גביר (@itamarbengvir) November 6, 2024
Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, was solely barely slower in congratulating Trump on his triumph within the US presidential election, changing into the primary world chief to take action and framing Trump’s victory as a “highly effective recommitment to the nice alliance between Israel and America”.
Pricey Donald and Melania Trump,
Congratulations on historical past’s biggest comeback!
Your historic return to the White Home provides a brand new starting for America and a strong recommitment to the nice alliance between Israel and America.
It is a big victory!
In true friendship,… pic.twitter.com/B54NSo2BMA
— Benjamin Netanyahu – בנימין נתניהו (@netanyahu) November 6, 2024
Two days earlier than this week’s election, which noticed former US President Donald Trump stage one of many wildest political comebacks in latest historical past, main the Republican Get together to a landslide victory, polls in Israeli media confirmed Trump had already received the hearts and minds of many in Israel.
Requested who they want to see within the White Home, nearly 65 % of respondents stated they most popular Trump over his rival, Kamala Harris. Amongst those that recognized themselves as Jewish, the distinction was much more marked, with 72 % of these polled telling the Israel Democracy Institute they felt Israel’s pursuits could be higher served by a Trump presidency.
It is a additional lurch in the direction of the Republicans. An identical ballot carried out by the identical physique in 2020 confirmed that 63 % of Israelis favoured Trump over the eventual victor, Joe Biden.
For Vice President Kamala Harris, who polls confirmed took a beating for her administration’s unflinching, if often vital, help of Israel’s warfare on Gaza and its refusal to halt army help, celebrations of Trump’s win in Israel possible come as one other twist of the knife in her defeat.
A ‘watershed second’
“Individuals are celebrating now,” pollster and former political aide to, amongst others, Netanyahu, Mitchell Barak informed Al Jazeera from Jerusalem. “I imply, you’ve seen the polls, individuals see this as a win for Israel, and for Netanyahu. He [Netanyahu] gambled on this, reckoning that he simply needed to maintain on until November and a Trump victory, and that gamble turned out to be proper.
“Inside Israel, individuals see this as being a watershed second,” he stated.
Within the build-up to the 2020 election, Trump had informed US voters in a bid to win the Jewish vote that “the Jewish state has by no means had a greater good friend within the White Home than your president, Donald J Trump”.
On this, in contrast to lots of the former US president’s statements, he appeared factually right.
In his first time period as president, Trump defied worldwide norms and recognised the occupied Golan Heights – Syrian territory, two-thirds of which is occupied by Israel – as Israeli territory, accepted Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, subsequently transferring the US embassy and put in its pro-settler ambassador there.
Consolidating Israel’s place inside the area, the US president additionally launched into what he termed the Abraham Accords, resulting in the normalisation of relations between Israel and 4 Arab states; Bahrain, the UAE, Morocco and Sudan, in return for US concessions and, in lots of instances, entry to Israel’s innovative intelligence and weapons know-how.
Extra just lately, Trump emphasised his want to re-establish the nice and cozy relationship he loved with Netanyahu throughout his first presidency in July this 12 months when he welcomed the Israeli prime minister to his Florida property, Mar-a-Lago.
In distinction, the Biden administration’s relations with Netanyahu, whereas robust, have cooled by way of the course of 13 months of warfare on Gaza.
First, there have been the repeated US “considerations” over the Israeli marketing campaign on Gaza that has up to now killed 43,391 individuals – principally ladies and youngsters – and with many hundreds extra misplaced and presumed useless beneath the rubble. Then there have been Biden’s pink strains on Israel’s subsequent invasion of Rafah. And eventually, the US authorities’s latest requests that help be allowed into northern Gaza, which help businesses have stated sits upon the brink of famine. All this seems to have jarred with the Israeli prime minister who, in March this 12 months, went as far as to say that US President Biden – whose unflinching army and diplomatic help has underpinned Israel’s warfare on Gaza – was “incorrect” in his criticism of Israel.
Given the stress that Netanyahu faces each at dwelling – from individuals who need a Gaza ceasefire deal to be accomplished to safe some likelihood of retrieving the remaining Israeli captives there – and overseas, the place many nations are appalled by the degrees of violence seen in Gaza – Netanyahu wants an American ally that’s uncritical, analysts have stated.
Finish of the two-state resolution?
In addition to being extra possible to offer Netanyahu free rein over his actions in Gaza and the West Financial institution – as is feared by Palestinians within the wake of the election – Trump might also be the catalyst to placing paid to any notion of a two-state resolution.
“Folks typically accuse the Israeli proper of by no means trying too far ahead,” unbiased Israeli analyst Nimrod Flaschenberg stated of Netanyahu and his cupboard. “And so they’re typically proper. Nonetheless, with Trump, they’ve recognised that his election most likely marks an finish to the two-state resolution and Gaza, as we’ve identified it.”
Within the US, regardless of its unflinching help for Israel’s warfare on Gaza, the two-state resolution – a minimum of formally – stays a central tenet of the outgoing Biden administration’s international coverage within the Center East, because it has earlier ones because the signing of the Oslo Accords within the Nineteen Nineties.
In mid-Could, Biden doubled down on the longstanding American coverage, telling a commencement ceremony in Georgia: “I’m working to verify we lastly get a two-state resolution.”
Nonetheless, simply weeks earlier, Trump appeared to take the other stance, telling Time journal: “Most individuals thought it was going to be a two-state resolution. I’m undecided a two-state resolution any extra is gonna work.”
Trump’s sentiment echoed the Center East peace plan, which he known as “the deal of the century” and offered in the direction of the tip of his first administration in 2020. To some observers, it learn like an Israeli want listing.
In it, amongst different measures, Trump affirmed his intention to recognise the majority of Israel’s unlawful settlements within the occupied West Financial institution, acknowledge a unified Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, deny the correct of return to Palestine’s refugees and, ought to statehood be granted to Palestine, guarantee it stays demilitarised.
With a newly returned Trump now in command of each homes of Congress and the Supreme Court docket, there is no such thing as a legislative or judicial block stopping the incoming Trump administration from delivering what the outgoing Trump administration had promised.
“Trump simply doesn’t care. He’s not ,” Flaschenberg stated of Gaza and Lebanon, the place Israel has launched devastating assaults towards the political group, Hezbollah, up to now killing 3,002 Lebanese civilians within the course of in latest weeks. “The one factor that’s new is individuals claiming to be shocked. They shouldn’t be. We’ve been right here earlier than,” he stated.
‘Slaughter as typical’
“Netanyahu and Trump share the identical genocidal agenda,” unbiased political scientist Ori Goldberg informed Al Jazeera from inside Israel, from the place Al Jazeera is banned from reporting.
“Each are towards what they see as ‘progressive wokeness’ or id politics. What’s extra, every assumes that the opposite is an fool that they’ll simply manipulate.”
Nonetheless, Goldberg cautioned that a minimum of a type of leaders’ evaluation of the opposite could also be broad of the mark. “I feel Netanyahu could also be a bit of short-sighted in how he sees Trump.
“Trump takes nice delight in his antiwar stance,” Goldberg stated, suggesting that, no matter guarantees had been made by Trump in 2020, sensible help was more likely to be restricted to weapons and {dollars}.
“It’s actually unlikely he’d sanction American boots on the bottom, however then, let’s face it, whoever accused Israel or Israeli politicians of enjoying the lengthy sport?” he stated. “For Netanyahu particularly, it’s all about making it by way of to the tip of that day.”
Within the meantime, with the weapons, help and diplomatic help already supplied by the Biden administration tough to enhance upon, Goldberg predicted little tangible change within the brief time period.
“Netanyahu will proceed to do no matter he desires, simply as he at all times has,” Goldberg stated, “It’ll be slaughter as typical.”