Can Israel Survive Without the West? The Answer Reveals Our Collective Power
by Ramzy
Baroud | Jul
4, 2025
The Israeli genocide in Gaza,
along with the escalating regional wars it has ignited, has brought two
chilling truths into our focus: first, Israel is deliberately and aggressively
undermining the security and stability of the entire Middle East and, second,
Israel is utterly incapable of surviving on its own.
These two assertions, though
seemingly distinct, are inextricably linked. For if those who relentlessly sustain Israel
– militarily, politically, and economically – were to finally withdraw their
support, the Middle East would not be the powder keg it has been for decades, a
situation that has catastrophically worsened since 7 October 2023.
Though no oversimplification
is intended, the brutal reality is that all it would take is for Israel to
withdraw from Gaza, allowing the devastated, genocide-stricken Strip the
faintest chance to heal. Over 56,000 Palestinians, including more than 17,000 children and
28,000 women,
have been brutally slaughtered since
the commencement of this war, a horrifying tally expected to surge dramatically
when comprehensive investigations into the missing are finally conducted.
Only then could the process of
returning to some semblance of normalcy begin, where the inalienable rights of
the Palestinian people must be fiercely championed within an international
system built, at least theoretically, upon unwavering respect for basic human
rights and international law.
The abhorrent “might makes
right” maxim would have to be utterly expunged from any future political
equation. Middle Eastern countries, both Arab and Muslim, must finally rise to
the occasion, stepping up decisively to aid their brethren and to ensure that
Israel is powerless to divide their ranks.
For Israel, this demand is
simply impossible, a non-starter and, understandably so, from its colonial
perspective. Why?
“Invasion is a structure, not
an event,” the influential scholar Patrick Wolfe has famously asserted.
This profound statement unequivocally means that Israel’s wars, commencing with
the ethnic cleansing of
Palestine, the Nakba, of 1948, and all subsequent wars and military occupations,
were not random historical coincidences, but rather integral components of an
enduring structure of power designed to eliminate the indigenous population.
This renders as simply false
the notion that Israel’s behavior after October 7 was solely driven by revenge and
devoid of strategy. We are perhaps excused for failing to initially grasp this
distinction, given the grisly, unspeakable nature of
the Israeli actions in Gaza and the palpable sense of perverse pleasure Israel
seems to derive from the daily murder of innocent people.
Yet, the language emanating
from Israel was chillingly clear about its true motives. As Benjamin Netanyahu declared on
7 October 2023, “we will turn Gaza into a deserted island”.
That has always been an
intrinsic, unchanging part of Israel’s colonial structure, and it will remain
so unless it is decisively reined in. But who possesses the will and power to
rein in Israel?
Israel operates through a
network of enablers, benefactors who have long viewed Israel’s existence as an
indispensable colonial fortress serving the
interests of Western colonialism.
“The connection between the
Israeli people and the American people is bone deep. (…) We’re united in our
shared values,” Joe Biden declared with
striking conviction in July 2022.
Without even bothering to
question those “shared values” that somehow permit Israel to perpetrate a
genocide while the US actively sustains it, Biden was undeniably honest in his
stark depiction that the relationship between both countries transcends mere
politics. Other Western leaders blindly parrot the
same perception.
The unfolding genocide,
however, has spurred some Western—and a multitude of non-Western—governments to
courageously speak out against the Israeli war, Netanyahu, and his extremist
ideology in ways unprecedented since Israel’s very establishment. For some of
these countries, notably Spain,
Norway, Ireland, and Slovenia,
among others, the proverbial ‘bond’ is demonstrably ‘breakable’ and their
support is most certainly not ‘unequivocal’.
There are various theories as
to why some Western governments dare to challenge Israel, while others
stubbornly refuse. That important discussion aside, shattering the bond between
Israel and the West is absolutely critical, not only for a just peace to finally
prevail, but for the very survival of the Palestinian people.
The nearly 21 agonizing months
of unrelenting Israeli genocide have
taught us a brutal lesson: Israel is, after all, a vassal state, utterly unable to
fight its own wars, to defend itself or even to sustain its own economy without
the direct, massive support of the US and others.
Prior to the war, there were
occasional outbursts from Israeli officials proclaiming that
Israel is an independent country, not “another star on the US flag”. These
voices have since been largely silenced, replaced by a constant stream of begging and
pleading for the US to come to Israel’s rescue.
While Palestinians continue to
stand with legendary courage to resist the Israeli military occupation and
apartheid, those who genuinely care about international law, justice, and peace
must take decisive action by directly confronting governments that persist in
helping Israel sustain the genocide in Gaza and the destabilization of the
Middle East.
Governments like Spain and
others are doing what many had not expected only years ago: Spanish Prime
Minister Pedro Sanchez is powerfully advocating for
the suspension of the EU-Israel
Association Agreement, an extensive trade deal in place since 2000, due to
“the catastrophic situation of genocide.”
If more such governments were
to adopt a similar, uncompromising stance, Israel would be choked off, at least
from acquiring the very murder weapons it uses to carry out its barbaric
genocide.
It is our collective
responsibility to march in lockstep behind such courageous voices and demand
uncompromising accountability, not only from Israel, but from those who are
actively sustaining its Israeli settler colonial structure.
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