challenging-the-idea-of-netanyahu-as-a-master-strategist-of-the-middle-east

Challenging the Idea of Netanyahu as a Master Strategist of the Middle East

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a visit to the Gaza Strip in November.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a visit to the Gaza Strip in November.Credit: Maayan Toaf / Government Press Office

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Haaretz senior columnist and former diplomat Alon Pinkas says that for years, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tacitly supported the continuation of the brutal dictatorship of Bashar Assad in Syria, and it is absurd for him to claim credit for helping to topple Assad’s rule by weakening the mainstays of Iranian power in the region.

“He might as well claim credit for the invasion of Normandy or the fall of the Berlin Wall or the surrender of Japan,” said Pinkas on the Haaretz Podcast, discussing his recent essay on the Israeli leader. “He had nothing to do with those things. That he decimated Hamas and decapitated or degraded Hezbollah? Absolutely, but the Israeli military did that. That’s the same military he maligned and that he foul-mouthed in the days and weeks following the October 7, 2023 calamity.”

According to Pinkas, Netanyahu is suffering from “delusions of grandeur” in his attempts to convince Israelis and the wider world that he is somehow remaking the Middle East by “cherry-picking successes, ignoring failures and presenting a false narrative.”

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