Haaretz is left-of-centre, but far from the only Israeli paper hashing out how to get rid of Netanyahu. This summary presents the problem for the West as one that can be solved by treating him like Putin, for reasons described below. The one thing the columnist missed is that Harris has *already* been given diplomatic roles to signal US keenness to work with someone else.

But locals have to throw off their far-right nightmare first. And soon.

archive.ph/IFJJZ

@MLClark The problem can only be solved by Israeli electors. Israel is becoming the sort of country it once despised.

@gshevlin

I'm guessing you didn't read the piece before concurring with the last part I mentioned; the point made here is that many locals still think of Netanyahu as someone with legitimacy on the world stage, even if they despise him. Without directly interfering in another country's elections, outside leaders can go a long way to disabusing locals of that notion by refusing to treat him with the same level of legitimacy.

(Colombia, Brazil, & Mexico are doing similar with Maduro right now.)

@MLClark I agree with the premise of the article, but ultimately it doesn't matter what I think. The electorate in Israel has to wise up.
Netanyahu's visit to Donald Trump should have been a powerful indication of his pathology, but a lot of Israelis probably saw that simply as smart statecraft.
I would like to see Netanyahu treated as a pariah by more countries, but I suspect that Israel engages in nuclear blackmail these days.

@hallmarc @MLClark
The implicit threat that if countries do not support and assist Israel, then Israel will have no choice but to use tactical nuclear weapons against neighboring countries if they threaten its existence.
"Nice Middle East you got here. Be shame if something bad was to happen to it..."

@gshevlin @MLClark there is no reasonable way to use tactical nukes in any neighboring countries except maybe for the far side of Iran.

@hallmarc @MLClark One of the downsides to world conflict is that nuclear weapons were only used twice, so very few people have first hand experience of the impact and after-effects. Many people see nuclear weapons as just a very big bomb or missile.

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@gshevlin @hallmarc

And even the countries that did use it didn't learn from it! Kissinger gained early fame for writing about situational use cases for more nuclear deployments mere years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He was even an advocate for their use in the Korean War - so there's a dangerous Western myth that we were all truly humbled by the terribleness of our invention after WWII. Warmongers in Kissinger's school of realpolitik always had an itchy trigger finger for nuclear disaster.

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