| Benny Gantz opinion column-- 
 
 What the World Gets Wrong About Israel
 Sept. 24, 2025, 1:00 a.m. ET
 Benny Gantz
 Mr. Gantz was Israel’s minister of defense and the Oct. 7 war cabinet minister. He is the chairman of the Blue and White Party.
 
 Since  Oct. 7, 2023, from my position both in Israel’s war cabinet and in the  opposition, I have watched how some in the West have misinterpreted  Israel’s actions in prosecuting its war against Hamas. For Israelis,  that day was not another round in a yearslong conflict. It was a  strategic rupture — and a reminder of what may happen when terror on our  doorstep is underestimated.
 
 Too  often, Western leaders view our policies in this war not through the  lens of national security, but through the prism of individuals — and,  in particular, Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. The  conversation is often framed as a question of what serves the prime  minister, as if Israel’s national security begins and ends with one man.  This view is mistaken and counterproductive to global stability,  regional normalization and Israel’s own security.
 
 There are deep political divisions and disagreements in Israel. I myself have been a vocal  critic  of Mr. Netanyahu. But the nation’s core security interests are not  partisan property. Today more than ever, they are anchored by a national  consensus that is rooted in the hard realities of our region.  Opposition to the recognition of Palestinian statehood stands at the  heart of that consensus. Any path forward for broader Palestinian civil  autonomy must first incorporate a proven long-term track record of  accountable governance, comprehensive de-radicalization reforms and a  successful crackdown on terror elements targeting Israelis.
 
 The growing support in the West for recognition is too often framed as a rebuke of both Mr. Netanyahu and his war policies.More  and more states’ recognition of Palestinian statehood is propelled not  merely by domestic political pressure, but also appears to be driven in  part by personal animosity between leaders.The  truth is that international recognition of Palestinian statehood under  current conditions is not a rejection of Mr. Netanyahu. It is a  rejection of Israel’s bipartisan security consensus.
 
 When  Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005, the Palestinian Authority was  entrusted with the territory’s control. The next year, Hamas won a  shocking plurality of seats in the P.A.’s legislative elections,  eclipsing its rival faction, Fatah.Hamas  violently overthrew Fatah in Gaza the next year, and with help from  Iran, Hamas dramatically expanded its military capabilities within Gaza,  and ultimately launched the Oct. 7 massacre.
 
 That  collapse was not an anomaly; it was the consequence of a Palestinian  Authority with little legitimacy among its people and a painful lesson  that Israel cannot risk suffering from again in the foreseeable future.
 
 As  it stands, the P.A. has failed to thwart terror originating in its  territory against Israel. It has incited violence and glorified  terrorism in school textbooks, and waged unilateral campaigns to isolate  and delegitimize Israel in international forums. At the United Nations,  in international courts, through boycott movements, it has sought to  bypass reform, accountability and dialogue — and dismiss Israel’s  security concerns altogether.
 
 The real question is whether the international community will respect the overwhelming consensus, a  declaration  passed last year by 99 of 120 members of the Knesset in a democracy  proclaiming that “Israel will continue to oppose unilateral recognition  of a Palestinian State,” and that “such action following Oct. 7 would be  an unprecedented rewarding of terror and prevent any future peace  arrangement.”
 
 Early  in the war, I spoke with Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of Spain, who  seemed to downplay the danger Israel was confronting. He remarked that  his country also contends with terrorism; I responded with sheer  astonishment at the conceptual lack of understanding. There is no  symmetry between defending one’s country against sporadically active  terror cells in Europe and a terror pseudostate that commands territory,  resources and military arsenals, backed by a country like Iran that  openly declares its ambition to annihilate us and fueled by a radical  Islamist ideological backbone.
 
 The  Spanish leader’s apparent failure to grasp this fundamental difference  reinforced my understanding of the extent to which Israel’s security  challenges are severely underestimated by the international community. I  insisted that those who seek peace, like me, must talk with whomever  they can but must fight and prevail over those who seek to harm us — not  only to safeguard future Israeli generations but to thwart strategic  interceptors of future regional normalization efforts.
 
 After  Oct. 7, it was not politics that shaped Israel’s military response. It  was necessity. Despite Mr. Netanyahu’s hesitation, I pressed for an  immediate ground operation in Gaza. I called for a stronger and faster  ground offensive in Rafah despite the international pressure. I called  for a powerful response on Iranian soil following the first Iranian  attack on April 13, 2024, while Mr. Netanyahu opted for a more  restrained symbolic response.And  still today, I fully support retaining an Israeli military presence in  Gaza long term to prevent Hamas from ever regrouping by maintaining a  military presence on the entire Gaza perimeter.The war could end tomorrow if the hostages were returned and Hamas relinquished its weapons and power.
 
 On  the eastern front, Israel must prepare to assume formal control over  the strategic Jordan Valley in the West Bank, which it has controlled  since 1967, in order to prevent smuggling into Palestinian territories  and terror infiltration into Israel. These are not political positions.  They are, in my view, security requirements to prevent the next Oct. 7.
 
 Israel’s  security is solely an Israeli responsibility, but not only an Israeli  concern. It anchors the stability of the Middle East and serves the free  world. Israel’s security goals, including deterring Iran’s regional  aspirations and damaging its nuclear program,prevent  the expansion of radical fundamentalist ideology in the region and a  broader nuclear arms race. It protects vital shipping lanes safeguarding  critical supply chains and freedom of navigation. Counterterrorism  cooperation with Israel has saved lives in European and American cities.  Gas exports from the Eastern Mediterranean help diversify Europe’s  energy supply. Israeli innovation strengthens global resilience in  fields from cybersecurity to agriculture.
 
 Ultimately,  Israel’s enemies do not care who governs in Jerusalem. The only thing  they want is to ensure that Israel is weak, insecure, divided and  incapable of defending itself. The international community should adopt  the same clarity. Make no mistake: The perception of the overwhelming  majority of Israelis on growing international Palestinianrecognitionis not a matter of personal politics, but rather of contending with the challenges of a new era.
 
 More on Palestinian statehood.
 
 Opinion | Mustafa Barghouti
 Give Palestinians Something More Than Statehood Recognition
 Sept. 22, 2025
 
 What Does It Mean to Recognize Palestinian Statehood?
 July 29, 2025
 
 https://archive.ph/o/lrDPS/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/29/world/middleeast/palestinian-statehood-israel.html
 
 archive.ph
 
 nytimes.com
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