War, Doublethink, and the Struggle for Survival: Geopolitics of the Gaza Genocide
by Ramzy
Baroud Posted on April 02, 2025
In a genocidal war that has spiraled into a struggle
for political survival, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition
and the global powers supporting him continue to sacrifice Palestinian lives
for political gain.
The sordid career of Israel’s extremist National
Security Minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, epitomizes this tragic reality.
Ben-Gvir joined Netanyahu’s government coalition following the
December 2022 elections. He remained in the coalition after the October 7
2023 war and genocide, with the understanding that any ceasefire in Gaza would
force his departure.
As long as the killing of Palestinians and the
destruction of their cities continued as long as Ben-Gvir stayed on board –
though neither he nor Netanyahu had any real ‘next-day’ plan, other than to
carry out some of the most heinous massacres against a civilian population in
recent history.
On January 19, Ben-Gvir left the government immediately following a ceasefire
agreement, which many argued would not last. Netanyahu’s untrustworthiness,
along with the collapse of his government if the war ended completely, made the
ceasefire unfeasible.
Ben-Gvir returned when the genocide resumed on March 18. “We are
back, with all our might and power!” he wrote In a tweet on the day of his return.
Israel lacks a clear plan because it cannot defeat the
Palestinians. While the Israeli army has inflicted suffering on the Palestinian
people like no other force has against a civilian population in modern history,
the war endures because the Palestinians refuse to surrender.
Yet, Israel’s military
planners know that a military victory is no longer possible. Former Defense
Minister Moshe Ya’alon recently added his voice to the growing chorus, stating during
an interview on March 15 that “revenge is not a war plan”.
The Americans, who supported
Netanyahu’s violation of the ceasefire – thus resuming the killings –
also understand that
the war is almost entirely a political struggle, designed to keep figures like
Ben-Gvir and extremist Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich in Netanyahu’s
coalition.
Though “war is the
continuation of politics by other means,” as Prussian General Carl von
Clausewitz once surmised,
in Israel’s case, the ‘politics’ behind the war is not about Israel as a state
but about Netanyahu’s own political survival. He is sacrificing Palestinian
children to stay in power, while his extremist ministers do the same to expand
their support among right-wing, religious, and ultra-nationalist
constituencies.
This logic – that Israel’s war
on Gaza reflects internal politics, ideological warfare, and class infighting –
extends to other political players as well.
The Trump administration
supports Israel as payback for the financial backing it received from
Netanyahu’s supporters in the US during the last elections. On the other hand,
Britain remains steadfast
in its commitment to Tel Aviv, despite the political shifts in Westminster,
thus continuing to align with US-Israeli interests while disregarding the
wishes of its own population. Meanwhile, Germany, it’s said, is driven by
the guilt of
its past crimes, while other Western governments pay lip service to human
rights, all the while acting in ways that contradict their stated foreign
policies.
This mirrors the dystopian
world of George Orwell’s ‘1984’, where perpetual
war is waged based on cynical and false assumptions, where “war is
peace… freedom is slavery… and ignorance is strength.”
Indeed, these elements are
reflected in today’s equally dystopian reality. However, Israel substitutes
‘peace’ with ‘security,’ the US is motivated by dominance and ‘stability,’ and
Europe continues to speak of ‘democracy.’
Another key difference is that
Palestinians do not belong to any of these ‘superstates.’ They are treated as
mere pawns, their deaths and enduring injustice used to create the illusion of
‘conflict’ and to justify the ongoing prolongation of the war.
The deaths of Palestinians –
now numbering over
50,000 – are widely reported by mainstream media outlets, yet rarely do they
mention that this is not a war in the traditional sense, but a genocide,
carried out, financed, and defended by Israel and Western powers for domestic
political reasons. Palestinians continue to resist because it is their only
option in the face of utter destruction and extermination.
Netanyahu’s war, however, is
not sustainable in the Orwellian sense, either. For it to be sustainable, it
would need infinite economic resources, which Israel, despite US generosity,
cannot afford.
It would also need an endless supply of soldiers, but reports indicate that
at least half of Israel’s reserves are not rejoining the army.
Furthermore, Netanyahu does
not merely seek to sustain the war; he aims to expand it.
This could shift regional and international dynamics in ways that neither
Israeli leaders nor their allies fully understand.
Aware of this, Arab
leaders met in
Cairo on March 4 to propose an alternative to Netanyahu-Trump’s plan to
ethnically cleanse Palestinians from Gaza. However, they have yet to take
meaningful action to hold Israel accountable if it continues to defy
international and humanitarian laws – as it has since the Arab summit.
The Arab world must escalate
beyond mere statements, or the Middle East may endure further war, all to
prolong Netanyahu’s coalition of extremists a little longer.
As for the West, the crisis
lies in its moral contradictions. The situation in Gaza embodies Orwell’s
concept of “doublethink” – the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in
one’s mind simultaneously and accepting both. Western powers claim to support
human rights while simultaneously backing genocide. Until this dilemma is
resolved, the Middle East will continue to endure suffering for years to come.
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