He also appeared,in a stunningly broad claim,to suggest that any criticism of Israel is inherently antisemitic.
Netanyahu’s post marks a turning point in the Australia-Israel relationship:one that has traditionally been described as a friendship,and often,inaccurately,as an alliance. Now the gloves are off,and diplomatic niceties have been thrown into the bin.
The attack on the Adass Israel synagogue in Ripponlea certainly appears to be a disgraceful antisemitic attack. Naturally,many people presumed the perpetrators were motivated by opposition to Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza. As of now,though,we have only suspicions,not evidence. At the time of writing,police have not identified any suspects or made any arrests. We don’t know what the attackers’ motivations were and whether they have been influenced by the Albanese government’s actions.
Compare Netanyahu’s rhetoric with that of Israel’s ambassador to Australia,Amir Maimon,just a few hours earlier:“I don’t hold the government,the Albanese government,as responsible for the rise[in antisemitism],” Maimon said at a press conference outside the Israeli embassy in Canberra.
Maimon said he was “disappointed” with Labor’s change in voting positions at the UN but added:“You don’t measure a relationship based on one or two votes.”
Netanyahu’s social media post deserves scrutiny. He blasted Australia’s decision to vote in favour of a motion on Wednesday calling for Israel to end its occupation of the West Bank and Gaza as soon as possible. Australia’s vote was indeed an important shift,given it had abstained or voted against similar motions since 2001. It is entirely legitimate to disagree with the decision,question its timing or criticise the way the government has explained the rationale for the shift.