Netanyahu Sparks Outrage at Al-Aqsa Amid Sydney Attack Warning and US Trip Plans

Netanyahu Sparks Outrage at Al-Aqsa Amid Sydney Attack Warning and US Trip Plans

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sparked outrage by visiting the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in occupied East Jerusalem for a Hanukkah event alongside US Ambassador Mike Huckabee, drawing swift condemnation from Palestinian authorities as a provocative incursion at the flashpoint holy site sacred to both Jews and Muslims, according to Yeni Safak. The move coincided with reports of over 210 Israeli settlers entering the complex since Monday during the Hanukkah holiday running through December 22. Just hours earlier that day while lighting the first Hanukkah candle at Israels National Police Academy, Netanyahu warned Jews worldwide of additional attacks following a deadly Sydney terror strike on Bondi Beach that killed 15 at a Hanukkah celebration, as covered by the New York Sun and FDDs Overnight Brief.

Last Friday, Netanyahu hosted a cohort of social media influencers in a meeting pushed by Generation Zion, alluding to them as a vital community fighting back in US media battles, amid revelations from Responsible Statecraft that Israel pays influencers roughly $7000 per post via the Esther Project run by Bridges Partners for the Foreign Ministry. On Sunday December 14, he reacted sharply to the Australian attack during a government meeting in Dimona, referencing his prior warning letter to Aussie PM Albanese about rising antisemitism, per CBN News YouTube remarks.

Domestically, Netanyahu defended his governments Haredi military exemption bill in a fiery Knesset debate on Monday, hailing it as the start of historic conscription increases while dismissing opposition jabs at his wartime leadership and international standing, as detailed in Jewish Dallass Israel Update for December 11. His ongoing Case 4000 criminal trial continued with hearings in Tel Aviv over alleged Bezeq regulatory favors for positive Walla coverage, according to the Jerusalem Post. A Times of Israel survey showed 53 percent of Israelis oppose a presidential pardon without his admission of guilt, though he insists hed stay politically active if granted.

Looking ahead with potential biographical weight, Netanyahu plans an eight-day US trip including two meetings with President Trump at Mar-a-Lago on December 29 to push the Gaza peace plan amid tensions over withdrawals, per Channel 12 via Atalayar and Jewish Dallas, as the US eyes announcing Trumps Board of Peace by months end.

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Jaksot(47)

Netanyahu Reignites Gaza Conflict: Ceasefire Unravels, Tensions Soar

Netanyahu Reignites Gaza Conflict: Ceasefire Unravels, Tensions Soar

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu has once again dominated global headlines after ordering immediate and powerful military strikes on Gaza, a move that ratcheted tensions and threatened the already fragile US-brokered ceasefire. His announcement, made via social media and official channels late Tuesday, came after Israel accused Hamas of violating the agreement by failing to return the remains of all Israeli hostages held in Gaza. According to multiple outlets including Al Jazeera, LiveNOW from FOX, and NPR, Netanyahu convened a top-level security consultation before making the call for air strikes, pointing to frustration over what he called repeated ceasefire violations and delays in hostage recovery by Hamas. The Israeli prime minister’s statement that Hamas’ actions were a “clear violation” of the ceasefire has been echoed across major media, with critics warning this could unravel the truce painstakingly arranged by President Trump.Tensions soared further after Israeli forces in southern Gaza came under fire from Hamas, prompting both military retaliation and a renewed public hard line from Netanyahu. Live camera feeds and social media posts from Netanyahu’s office have further fueled public debate, with speculation swirling across Twitter and Facebook that this escalation is not only a response to Hamas but also a message to Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition and his international critics. Social media reaction has been swift and divided, with some hardline supporters demanding a return to total war, while critics inside Israel and internationally accuse Netanyahu of undermining peace just as hopes for a prolonged truce seemed possible.Amid the escalation, Netanyahu has also faced renewed scrutiny over Israel’s broader position in the world. Reports from the Middle East Institute and the Times of Israel detail how he addressed Israel’s parliament alongside President Trump, marking apparent military victories against Hamas and its allies but facing mounting criticism for what many pundits now call an inability to convert battlefield gains into lasting peace or international legitimacy. Charges from the International Criminal Court and accusations of war crimes continue to dog both Netanyahu and Israel, with analysts at VPM.org warning that international isolation is at its highest in decades. The body count in Gaza has sharply increased, fueling protests and debate in the region and beyond.Lastly, in Israeli domestic politics, anticipation is building for the upcoming public webinar at the Middle East Institute, where leading analysts will dissect Netanyahu’s prospects for political survival ahead of national elections looming within the year. Though no major public appearances outside of the heightened political statements have been reported in the last few days, speculation is rampant that Netanyahu’s future depends on navigating both the military field and a precarious diplomatic landscape—a challenge that remains unresolved as Israel’s Gaza campaign resets to high alert.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

1 Marras 3min

Netanyahu Asserts Israel's Autonomy Amid Gaza Ceasefire and US Influence Speculation

Netanyahu Asserts Israel's Autonomy Amid Gaza Ceasefire and US Influence Speculation

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu has spent the last few days visibly asserting Israel’s independence amid intense speculation about US influence and the Gaza ceasefire drama. At Sunday’s Cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Netanyahu forcefully rejected what he called “absurd accusations” that US policymakers are dictating Israeli security moves. He told ministers that Israel acts alone on defense, not seeking foreign approval for military action, and declared, “We control our own security and will continue to control our destiny.” The Jerusalem Post and ABC News both reported Netanyahu’s strong language, with him reminding partners that only Israel will decide which international security forces, if any, can operate in Gaza. This is a direct response to international whispers and headlines painting Israel as a US protectorate—a narrative Netanyahu called both “ridiculous” and “nonsense,” even as he affirmed a partnership with Washington “at an all-time high.” The diplomatic chessboard is busy. Secretary of State Marco Rubio met Netanyahu in Jerusalem on October 23 in a series of publicized events, reaffirming the US-Israel “strategic relationship.” Rubio later said that any international force in Gaza would “be made up of countries that Israel’s comfortable with,” seemingly backing Netanyahu’s tough stance. The meetings and calls between Netanyahu and Rubio have been heavily publicized in both Israeli and US press.Security remains a live-wire. Last Saturday, Israeli forces, acting on Netanyahu’s orders, conducted drone strikes in Gaza targeting members of Islamic Jihad after alleged ceasefire violations, while skirmishes with Hezbollah and incidents in Lebanon keep the region on edge. Meanwhile, Netanyahu approved an Egyptian technical team’s entry into Gaza, emphasizing it was purely humanitarian and “not connected to the Egyptian army.” Egyptian media and global outlets reported earth-moving equipment and search specialists entering Gaza to find remains of Israeli hostages. This development, tied to the ongoing, fragile ceasefire, highlights Netanyahu’s continued control over the narrative and who has access to Gaza.On the social media front, Netanyahu’s rejection of US control and insistence on Israeli autonomy have been widely shared and debated, fueling both fierce defense from loyalists and critique from opposition voices. Analysts and opinion writers across The Jerusalem Fund and international channels have weighed in, questioning whether these high-profile reassertions of sovereignty will change Israel’s image on the world stage. For now, with global leaders hovering and the spotlight fixed, every statement and meeting seems engineered not just for diplomacy but for legacy.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

28 Loka 3min

Netanyahu's High-Wire Act: Balancing US Pressure, Domestic Politics, and Survival Instincts

Netanyahu's High-Wire Act: Balancing US Pressure, Domestic Politics, and Survival Instincts

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu has absorbed another turbulent—but strategically revealing—week, as he balances intense American pressure with domestic political calculus heading into a likely 2026 election. According to The Times of Israel, a new poll shows Netanyahu’s Likud party remains Israel’s largest political force, though it has dipped three seats to 31 following the Gaza hostage release deal. Still, his grip on power is increasingly dependent on U.S. President Donald Trump, whose “bearhug” (as The Times of Israel puts it) has delivered tangible wins—hostages freed, Iran’s nuclear program bombed, and White House invites—but also left Netanyahu with vanishing room to maneuver. The American-backed Gaza ceasefire, which Netanyahu was all but forced to accept, now sees Washington dictating not just the ceasefire’s terms, but Israel’s next steps—right down to Secretary of State Marco Rubio telling Netanyahu, live in Jerusalem, that U.S. officials are there to maintain momentum for peace, not just monitor progress, and to bluntly criticize an Israeli Knesset preliminary annexation vote as “counterproductive.” Netanyahu stood alongside Rubio calling the relationship a “circle of trust and partnership,” but Israeli media, including Ynet and Israel Hayom, are already joking about “Bibi-sitting”—the idea that Netanyahu is being closely supervised from Washington, lest he upset the fragile Gaza détente. Al Monitor and various live updates confirm multiple senior U.S. officials—Jared Kushner, Steve Witkoff, JD Vance, and finally Rubio—cycled through Jerusalem in under a week, reinforcing the message that Israel’s autonomy is, at best, relative. Voters may sense this new reality: Netanyahu’s long-successful coalition skills are now bumping up against Trump’s notoriously flexible deal-making, with Vance even dismissing the West Bank annexation move as a “very stupid political stunt.” On the plus side, Netanyahu continues to enjoy robust public approval for the hostage deal, the durable U.S. alliance, and a resilient wartime economy, per The Times of Israel. But cracks are visible: the loss of coalition partners Shas and United Torah Judaism, senior aides departing, and a resurgent opposition eager to paint him as both weak on Hamas (for slow-walking the return of slain hostages) and complicit in Israel’s worst security failure (the October 7 debacle). On the diplomatic front, Netanyahu hosted Egyptian intelligence chief Hassan Rashad for rare, high-profile talks; Egypt, according to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, is scrambling to reposition itself as a regional mediator, even as Israel accuses it of military buildup in Sinai and lax policing of weaponized drone smuggling. Netanyahu’s social media presence remains focused on security and partnership—no major viral controversies, but plenty of photo-ops with American officials and grateful statements for U.S. strikes on Iran. In summary, Netanyahu’s week saw him both buoyed and boxed in: a wartime leader thriving in the international spotlight but increasingly caught between Washington’s demands, coalition chaos, and a public that still trusts him—but only up to a point. The coming election season will test whether Israel’s ultimate survivor can outlast his American patron, his domestic critics, and his own political paradoxes.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

25 Loka 4min

Netanyahu's War of Redemption: Navigating Ceasefire, Controversy, and Conflict in Israel

Netanyahu's War of Redemption: Navigating Ceasefire, Controversy, and Conflict in Israel

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu is navigating a critical moment as Israel's longest-serving prime minister, with developments centered around the fragile ceasefire deal brokered by President Trump. In a detailed CBS News interview conducted on October 14th in Tel Aviv, Netanyahu defended the controversial prisoner exchange that released some Palestinians convicted of mass murder, acknowledging the pain for victims' families but insisting it was necessary to secure the release of twenty hostages held by Hamas.The prime minister revealed how he pushed his military to enter Gaza City despite internal debate, saying he needed Trump's diplomatic pressure to fashion a deal that wouldn't succumb to Hamas's demands. Netanyahu emphasized that while Trump declared the war over, Israeli forces remain deployed in Gaza under terms that include eventual disarmament and demilitarization of Hamas.Netanyahu spoke before the Knesset on October 20th, officially naming the ongoing conflict "The War of Redemption," a symbolic gesture meant to represent Israel's rise from the October 7th attacks. That same day, polling showed Netanyahu remaining atop political surveys despite widespread anger over the war's conduct.Behind the scenes, serious tensions are emerging with Washington. According to The New York Times, American officials are concerned Netanyahu may abandon the ceasefire and return to war. Vice President JD Vance, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner traveled to Israel on Tuesday to convince him not to resume hostilities.Netanyahu's absence from a peace summit in Egypt with twenty world leaders raised eyebrows. He explained to CBS that scheduling conflicts with the Jewish holiday prevented his attendance, though he wanted to be there.A new controversy emerged around Israel's propaganda efforts. Documents reveal the Israeli government is paying social media influencers approximately seven thousand dollars per post through a firm called Bridges Partners, part of a campaign Netanyahu referenced when discussing fighting back through "our influencers." The Washington Post and other outlets exposed how Israel spent fifty million dollars on ads across Google and X, deploying artificial intelligence tools and sophisticated disinformation campaigns to counter growing international criticism, particularly among young Americans where support has plummeted to just fourteen percent among those under thirty.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

21 Loka 2min

Netanyahu's Media Blitz: Influencers, Hostages, and the Gaza Ceasefire

Netanyahu's Media Blitz: Influencers, Hostages, and the Gaza Ceasefire

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu has dominated headlines over the past few days, riding a wave of global attention that follows the historic ceasefire in Gaza and the release of the last hostages. According to CBS News, Netanyahu gave a high-profile interview in Tel Aviv just after Israel’s military withdrew from parts of Gaza and a new peace plan was brokered by President Trump and several Arab states. In that interview, Netanyahu called for Hamas to disarm as a precondition for peace and described the agony of meeting with hostage families, a moment that resonated widely through Israeli media and social platforms. The mood around him is one of measured relief, but also deep uncertainty, as opponents within Israel continue to criticize his perceived focus on personal popularity over national unity, a sentiment reported by The National.One of the biggest business stories tied to Netanyahu is the government’s escalating use of social media influencers. Responsible Statecraft and The New Arab broke details on “The Esther Project,” an official campaign paying select influencers up to seven thousand dollars per post to amplify pro-Israel messaging worldwide. Bridges Partners LLC, contracted by the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, has been managing the network and pushing polished narratives about the situation in Gaza, sometimes sparking global digital rights outcry. The Arab Center for the Advancement of Social Media published a position paper this week describing these tactics as deliberate disinformation meant to legitimize aggression and reshape global perception. On the flip side, some pro-Netanyahu accounts and posts continue to trend, with paid campaigns, video advertisements, and algorithmic pushes leading to heated debates online, especially after controversy over the portrayal of food availability in Gaza.Netanyahu’s public appearances have been steady and strategic. NBC News aired Netanyahu’s full remarks to the Knesset as he welcomed President Trump, underscoring two years of war since October 7 and emphasizing the dire cost paid by Israeli society. Throughout his speeches, Netanyahu has leaned heavily into themes of resilience and “peace through strength,” positioning himself at the center of Israel’s military and diplomatic achievements. He has also been photographed with released hostages and their families, according to The Jerusalem Post—a move surely intended to project empathy, though critics argue it is also an attempt to counter recent slumps in domestic polls.A major headline from Fox News and social media this week centers on Trump’s account of Netanyahu’s reaction to the ceasefire deal, reportedly exclaiming, “I can’t believe it, everybody is liking me now.” While Trump’s peace plan is being praised at the regional level, analysts are divided on whether Netanyahu will enjoy a real political rebound. Israeli support for Netanyahu remains volatile, with poll bumps appearing only in the wake of perceived victories but not at a level to stabilize his political future in any lasting way. The political and media machinery around Netanyahu is running at full throttle, but the long-term impact of current events—especially paid propaganda efforts and his handling of the Gaza ceasefire—may be what defines his next chapter.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

18 Loka 4min

Netanyahu's Legacy: Ceasefire, Hostages, and a Precarious Balance

Netanyahu's Legacy: Ceasefire, Hostages, and a Precarious Balance

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.The past few days have seen Benjamin Netanyahu at the center of a historic set of events with potential to define the latter chapters of his decades-long political career. According to multiple reports, including The Jerusalem Post and Democracy Now, Netanyahu addressed the nation last week as Israel’s government approved a U.S.-brokered ceasefire and hostage-release deal with Hamas, marking a dramatic pivot in a conflict that has raged for nearly two years. Netanyahu framed the agreement—which saw Hamas release the last 20 living Israeli hostages, with the bodies of 28 more returned—as a fulfillment of a core wartime objective, though he emphasized that neutralizing the threats from Iran, Hamas, and Hezbollah remained unfinished business. The deal also triggered a massive prisoner swap, with Israel freeing nearly 2,000 Palestinian detainees, many held without charge, according to Democracy Now.Diplomatic momentum surged as President Donald Trump arrived in Israel, meeting released hostages and addressing the Knesset, where he heralded a “golden age” for the Middle East. While Netanyahu was invited to a follow-up peace summit in Egypt co-hosted by Trump and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, he ultimately did not attend, citing unspecified timing issues, as reported by The Jerusalem Post. Netanyahu did, however, speak by phone with Sisi, signaling continued high-level coordination even as he remained on Israeli soil during a moment of both national relief and domestic reckoning.The political stakes for Netanyahu are monumental. Analysts, including those quoted by Albert Mohler, suggest the prime minister’s decision to accept a ceasefire—and the return of hostages as a top national priority—could reshape his legacy, for better or worse. His military strategy following the October 2023 Hamas attacks drew global attention for its intensity, reportedly decimating the leadership cores of Hezbollah and Hamas, and executing bold strikes inside Iran. Yet, as Mohler notes, Netanyahu’s political future is uncertain: questions linger over Israel’s preparedness in 2023, and his coalition faces pressure from both the Israeli public and the U.S. administration, especially after a controversial Israeli strike on Qatar strained relations with a key American ally.On the ground, scenes of jubilation in Israel as hostages reunited with families were countered by threats from Israeli officials to arrest Palestinians celebrating prisoner releases in the West Bank, and by the grim reality in Gaza, where returnees found neighborhoods in ruins and recovery efforts uncovered hundreds of bodies. Meanwhile, international protests in solidarity with Palestine underscored the fragile, asymmetrical nature of the conflict, with critics like former UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn questioning the sustainability of the U.S.-backed deal without broader Palestinian political engagement.Netanyahu’s public appearances have been tightly scripted and focused on the national narrative of resilience and resolve. There is no verifiable reporting of significant business activity or viral social media presence from Netanyahu in recent days—his energy appears devoted to statesmanship at a hinge moment. The long-term biographical significance of these events is clear: Netanyahu is navigating a precarious balance between military triumph, diplomatic compromise, and domestic accountability, with the eyes of the world—and history—firmly upon him.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

14 Loka 4min

Netanyahu's Gaza Gambit: Ceasefire, Controversy, and Clout in the Crosshairs

Netanyahu's Gaza Gambit: Ceasefire, Controversy, and Clout in the Crosshairs

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu has seized the global spotlight again this week with a whirlwind of dramatic developments and headline-making decisions. The biggest headline of the week: Israel’s government, led by Netanyahu, has officially approved a US-brokered Gaza ceasefire deal. In a defiant national address, Netanyahu credited himself and Donald Trump with achieving the near-impossible—securing the release of the hostages abducted on October 7—while sidestepping Hamas’s demand for a complete IDF withdrawal from Gaza, which many observers said was previously off the table. Netanyahu doubled down on his strategy, claiming that intense military and diplomatic pressure was the only reason Hamas blinked, insisting that “the sword is still there” and vowing Gaza would soon be demilitarized. He was crystal clear that if Hamas fails to deliver, the world should expect Israel to act decisively, echoing his infamous “easy way or the hard way” line from both the address to Israeli citizens and his interview with Euronews.All of this comes amid rising speculation, not yet publicly confirmed, about Netanyahu’s political maneuvering. According to Israeli daily Maariv, Likud insiders say the prime minister may be laying the groundwork for early elections, hoping to ride a wave of public optimism following the Gaza deal. No announcement yet, but Netanyahu’s camp isn’t denying the rumors and political operatives are already mobilizing.On the world stage, Netanyahu’s message to Europe and the US has been uncompromising: Hamas rule in Gaza must end and there can be no return to the status quo. He has repeatedly underscored Israel’s readiness to ensure that Gaza remains demilitarized, warning European leaders of the dangers of appeasing extremism.Behind the scenes, Netanyahu has thrown his support behind an aggressive pro-Israel social media push. Meeting with American influencers—and reportedly referencing them as an essential weapon in Israel’s information arsenal—he’s tapping into the influencer economy with payments reaching up to 7000 dollars per post according to documents reviewed by Truthout. On Instagram, his acceptance of the Gaza ceasefire deal has set off a firestorm of comments ranging from adulation to outright fury, revealing just how polarizing he remains on and off the web. His own messaging has focused on hope, unity, and the promise of bringing everyone home, but the online discourse is as fierce as ever, with every move scrutinized and often mocked.Amid the ongoing ceasefire, major news organizations like CBS News report the start of humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza and a tense countdown as both Israelis and Palestinians await the release of remaining hostages. International perspectives remain divided, with global leaders thanking President Trump and voicing cautious hope. Yet Netanyahu, never shy of controversy or drama, finds himself yet again at the epicenter of Middle East history, with his legacy and future now as much a matter of political intrigue and social media spectacle as battlefield facts.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

11 Loka 3min

Netanyahu's Digital Offensive: Influencers, Ads, and a Hostage Blunder

Netanyahu's Digital Offensive: Influencers, Ads, and a Hostage Blunder

Benjamin Netanyahu BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.Benjamin Netanyahu has been a constant fixture in the headlines over the past several days, navigating everything from political drama to social media battles. One of the most public slip-ups came when he was interviewed and insisted there were only 46 Israeli hostages remaining in Gaza, sparking outrage from families and advocacy groups who quickly pointed out the actual count stands at 48. The Hostages and Missing Families Forum publicly rebuked Netanyahu for the confusion, making this a significant embarrassment, picked up not only by Israeli media but also by The Independent and The Jerusalem Post.As the tense anniversary of the October 7 Hamas attack drew global attention, Netanyahu addressed Israelis, emphasizing the need for continued pressure on Gaza until all hostages are freed and talking up prospects of a new peace plan—reportedly the brainchild of former US President Donald Trump—aimed at ending the war with specific terms on security arrangements, border controls, and hostage releases. According to reports from the Institute for the Study of War and ABC7 New York, negotiations remain fragile and protests both for and against ceasefire terms swept through Israel. Netanyahu's handling of figures during these memorials has attracted further scrutiny.On the business and media front, he has become deeply tied to a wave of digital propaganda efforts. According to Responsible Statecraft and Truthout, Netanyahu recently referenced in a strategy meeting the mobilization of Israeli social media influencers, who are being paid up to seven thousand dollars per post to flood TikTok and Instagram with pro-Israel messaging, a campaign coordinated through firms like Bridges Partners with nearly a million dollars in recent invoices. Content creators posting under these arrangements are reportedly tasked with countering growing pro-Palestinian sentiment, especially among American Gen Z audiences. Netanyahu underscored the importance of this digital offensive in a Friday address, calling social media Israel’s most important battleground and urging constant engagement with what he termed Israel’s influencer community.Meanwhile, TRT World and related reporting have raised questions about a recently uncovered $45 million contract between Netanyahu’s office and Google to manage global ad campaigns downplaying reports of famine in Gaza and contesting United Nations data, as well as a separate campaign targeting Gen Z via US-based Clock Tower X to shape perceptions on TikTok and YouTube. Critics and activists on social media have widely circulated these revelations, fueling further debate about the ethical bounds of state-backed digital outreach and artificial intelligence aimed at narrative control.Speculation remains around the full details of the Trump peace proposal and backroom meetings with key donors in the US tech sector, but the confirmed headlines this week are all about Netanyahu’s relentless pivot to digital campaigning and his controversial public statements on the hostage crisis—moments certain to echo in his biography for months to come.Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

7 Loka 3min

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