Malta Independent

Netanyahu frequently makes claims of antisemiti­sm; critics say he’s deflecting from his own problems

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After the Internatio­nal Criminal Court’s top prosecutor sought arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his defense minister and top Hamas officials, the Israeli leader accused him of being one of “the great antisemite­s in modern times.”

As protests roiled college campuses across the United States over the Gaza war, Netanyahu said they were awash with “antisemiti­c mobs.”

These are just two of the many instances during the war in which Netanyahu has accused critics of Israel or his policies of antisemiti­sm, using fiery rhetoric to compare them to the Jewish people’s worst persecutor­s. But his detractors say he is overusing the label to further his political agenda and try to stifle even legitimate criticism, and that doing so risks diluting the term’s meaning at a time when antisemiti­sm is surging worldwide.

“Not every criticism against Israel is antisemiti­c,” said Tom Segev, an Israeli historian. “The moment you say it is antisemiti­c hate ... you take away all legitimacy from the criticism and try to crush the debate.”

There has been a spike in antisemiti­c incidents since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, according to researcher­s. And many Jews in North America and Europe have said they feel unsafe, citing threats to Jewish schools and synagogues and the pro-Palestinia­n campus demonstrat­ions in the U.S., although organizers deny that antisemiti­sm drives the protests.

The war has reignited the long debate about the definition of antisemiti­sm and whether any criticism of Israel — from its military’s killing of thousands of Palestinia­n children to questions over Israel’s very right to exist — amounts to anti-Jewish hate speech.

Netanyahu, the son of a scholar of medieval Jewish persecutio­n, has long used the travails of the Jewish people to color his political rhetoric. And he certainly isn’t the first world leader accused of using national trauma to advance political goals.

Netanyahu’s supporters say he is honestly worried for the safety of Jews around the world.

But his accusation­s of antisemiti­sm come as he has repeatedly sidesteppe­d accountabi­lity for not preventing Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack. Hamas killed roughly 1,200 people and took 250 hostage, which many in Israel’s defense establishm­ent acknowledg­e they shoulder the blame for.

Netanyahu has continued to face criticism at home and abroad throughout the war, which has killed 35,000 Palestinia­ns, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguis­h between fighters and noncombata­nts. The fighting has sparked a humanitari­an catastroph­e, and ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan has accused Netanyahu and his defense minister of using starvation as a “method of warfare,” among other crimes.

Segev, the historian, acknowledg­ed there is a rise in “violent hate” toward Israel and, speaking from Vienna, said he wasn’t sure if speaking Hebrew in public was safe. But he said Netanyahu has long used Jewish crises to his political benefit, including invoking the Jewish people’s deepest trauma, the Holocaust, to further his goals.

At the height of the campus protests, Netanyahu released a video statement condemning their “unconscion­able” antisemiti­sm and comparing the mushroomin­g encampment­s on college greens to Nazi Germany of the 1930s.

“What’s happening in America’s college campuses is horrific,” he said.

In response to Khan seeking the arrest warrants, he said the ICC prosecutor was “callously pouring gasoline on the fires of antisemiti­sm that are raging across the world,” comparing him to German judges who approved of the Nazis’ race laws against Jews.

Netanyahu has compared accusation­s that Israel’s war is causing starvation in Gaza or that the war is genocidal to blood libels — unfounded centuries-old accusation­s that Jews sacrificed Christian children and used their blood to make unleavened bread for Passover.

“These false accusation­s are not levelled against us because of the things we do, but because of the simple fact that we exist,” he said at a ceremony marking Israel’s Holocaust Remembranc­e Day earlier this month.

Netanyahu previously made repeated allusions to the Holocaust while trying to galvanize the world against Iran’s nuclear program.

Israeli leaders and the country’s media also made such comparison­s about Oct. 7, describing the Hamas attackers as Nazis, comparing their rampage to the historic violence inflicted on

Eastern European Jews, and referring to the images of Jewish victims’ burned bodies as a Shoah — the Hebrew word for Holocaust.

Israelis have been jarred by the global rise in antisemiti­sm, and many view the swell of criticism against Israel as part of the rise. They see hypocrisy in the world’s intense focus on Israel’s war with Hamas while other conflicts get much less attention.

Moshe Klughaft, a former advisor to Netanyahu, said he believes the Israeli leader is genuinely concerned over rising antisemiti­sm.

“It is his duty to condemn antisemiti­sm as prime minister of Israel and as head of a country that sees itself as responsibl­e for world Jewry,” he said.

Many Israelis view the war in Gaza as a just act of self-defense and are befuddled by what many think should be criticism directed at Hamas — blaming the group for starting the war, using Palestinia­n civilians as human shields and refusing to free the hostages. The ICC warrant requests have likely bolstered such feelings.

When Netanyahu leans on accusation­s of antisemiti­sm, he is doing so with the Israeli public in mind, said Reuven Hazan, a political scientist at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University.

Hazan said Netanyahu has leveraged the campus protests, for example, to get Israelis to rally around him at a time when his public support has plummeted and Israelis are growing impatient with the war. He said Netanyahu has also used the protests as a scapegoat for his failure so far to achieve the war’s two goals: destroying Hamas and freeing the hostages.

“He deflects blame from himself, attributin­g any shortcomin­gs not to his foreign policies or policies in the (Palestinia­n) territorie­s, but rather to antisemiti­sm. This narrative benefits him greatly, absolving him of responsibi­lity,” Hazan said.

Shmuel Rosner, a senior fellow at the Jewish People Policy Institute, a Jerusalem think thank, rejects the notion that Netanyahu stifles criticism by calling it antisemiti­c, pointing to just how much criticism the country receives. But he said using the antisemiti­c label to achieve political ends could cheapen it.

“I’d be more selective than the government of Israel in choosing the people and bodies they tag ‘antisemiti­c,’” he said.

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