
Gaza War Deepens Israel's Divides
Hostage families and peace activists want Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government to secure a ceasefire with Hamas and free the remaining captives abducted during the October 2023 Hamas attacks.
Right-wing members of Netanyahu's cabinet, meanwhile, want to seize the moment to occupy and annex more Palestinian land, at the risk of sparking further international criticism.
The debate has divided the country and strained private relationships, undermining national unity at Israel's moment of greatest need in the midst of its longest war.
"As the war continues we become more and more divided," said Emanuel Yitzchak Levi, a 29-year-old poet, schoolteacher and peace activist from Israel's religious left who attended a peace meeting at Tel Aviv's Dizengoff Square.
"It's really hard to keep being a friend, or family, a good son, a good brother to someone that's -- from your point of view -- supporting crimes against humanity," he told AFP.
"And I think it's also hard for them to support me if they think I betrayed my own country."
As if to underline this point, a tall, dark-haired cyclist angered by the gathering pulled up his bike to shout "traitors" at the attendees and to accuse activists of playing into Hamas's hands.
Dvir Berko, a 36-year-old worker at one of the city's many IT startups, paused his scooter journey across downtown Tel Aviv to share a more reasoned critique of the peace activists' call for a ceasefire.
Berko and others accused international bodies of exaggerating the threat of starvation in Gaza, and he told AFP that Israel should withhold aid until the remaining 49 hostages are freed.
"The Palestinian people, they're controlled by Hamas. Hamas takes their food. Hamas starts this war and, in every war that happens, bad things are going to happen. You're not going to send the other side flowers," he argued.
"So, if they open a war, they should realise and understand what's going to happen after they open the war."
The raised voices in Tel Aviv reflect a deepening polarisation in Israeli society since Hamas's October 2023 attacks left 1,219 people dead, independent journalist Meron Rapoport told AFP.
Rapoport, a former senior editor at liberal daily Haaretz, noted that Israel had been divided before the latest conflict, and had even seen huge anti-corruption protests against Netanyahu and perceived threats to judicial independence.
Hamas's attack initially triggered a wave of national unity, but as the conflict has dragged on and Israel's conduct has come under international criticism, attitudes on the right and left have diverged and hardened.
"The moment Hamas acted there was a coming together," Rapoport said. "Nearly everyone saw it as a just war.
"As the war went on it has made people come to the conclusion that the central motivations are not military reasons but political ones."
According to a survey conducted between July 24 and 28 by the Institute for National Security Studies, with 803 Jewish and 151 Arab respondents, Israelis narrowly see Hamas as primarily to blame for the delay in reaching a deal on freeing the hostages.
Only 24 percent of Israeli Jews are distressed or "very distressed" by the humanitarian situation in Gaza -- where, according to UN-mandated reports, "a famine is unfolding" and Palestinian civilians are often killed while seeking food.
But there is support for the families of the Israeli hostages, many of whom have accused Netanyahu of prolonging the war artificially to strengthen his own political position.
"In Israel there's a mandatory army service," said Mika Almog, 50, an author and peace activist with the It's Time Coalition.
"So these soldiers are our children and they are being sent to die in a false criminal war that is still going on for nothing other than political reasons."
In an open letter published Monday, 550 former top diplomats, military officers and spy chiefs urged US President Donald Trump to tell Netanyahu that the military stage of the war was already won and he must now focus on a hostage deal.
"At first this war was a just war, a defensive war, but when we achieved all military objectives, this war ceased to be a just war," said Ami Ayalon, former director of the Shin Bet security service.
The conflict "is leading the State of Israel to lose its security and identity", he warned in a video released to accompany the letter.
This declaration by the security officers -- those who until recently prosecuted Israel's overt and clandestine wars -- echoed the views of the veteran peace activists that have long protested against them.
Biblical archaeologist and kibbutz resident Avi Ofer is 70 years old and has long campaigned for peace between Israelis and Palestinians.
He and fellow activists wore yellow ribbons with the length in days of the war written on it: "667".
The rangy historian was close to tears as he told AFP: "This is the most awful period in my life."
"Yes, Hamas are war criminals. We know what they do. The war was justified at first. At the beginning it was not a genocide," he said.
Not many Israelis use the term "genocide", but they are aware that the International Court of Justice (ICJ) is considering whether to rule on a complaint that the country has breached the Genocide Convention.
While only a few are anguished about the threat of starvation and violence hanging over their neighbours, many are worried that Israel may become an international pariah -- and that their conscript sons and daughters be treated like war crimes suspects when abroad.
Israel and Netanyahu -- with support from the United States -- have denounced the case in The Hague. A demonstrator wearing a mask depicting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with an elongated nose, evoking the literary character Pinocchio, poses above another lying on the ground while depicting an Israeli hostage during an anti-government protest calling for action to secure the release of Israeli hostages held captive in the Gaza Strip by Palestinian militants since the 2023 October 7 attacks, outside the Israeli Defence Ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv on August 2, 2025. AFP Israeli right-wing protesters gather on a hill overlooking Gaza to call for the re-occupation of the territory AFP

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Fact check: Are X's community notes fueling misinformation? – DW – 08/05/2025
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In July 2025, a post by Sky News quoting the United Kingdom's Metropolitan Police chief went viral, accumulating over 4.7 million views. The post linked to a Sky News article based on an interview with the police chief, which highlighted structural inequality, noting it was "shameful" that black boys in London were statistically more likely to die young than white boys. The community note was then added; however, it was reframed, stating: "The headline lacks the essential context that despite making up only 13% of London's total population, Black Londoners account for 45% of London's knife murder victims, 61% of knife murder perpetrators, and 53% of knife crime perpetrators." While factually correct, the note introduced unrelated crime statistics from 2022 — subtly shifting the focus from systemic inequality to framing black boys as perpetrators of crime. Instead of clarifying the issue, the note distorted the original message, misleading users who hadn't actually clicked on the link in the post. Another problem was spotted by experts during the 2024 US Presidential elections. Researchers Alexios Mantzarlis and Alex Mahadevan from the Florida-based Poynter Institute analyzed community notes posted on Election Day. Their goal was to assess whether community notes were helping counter election misinformation or not. Their findings raised concerns. Out of all fact-checkable posts analyzed, only 29% carried a community note rated as "helpful." In X's system, a note is rated "helpful" when it is upvoted by a diverse group of contributors and prioritized for public display. But of these "helpful" notes, only 67% actually addressed content that was fact-checkable. In other words, nearly a third of the notes that appeared as helpful were attached to posts that didn't contain factual claims at all. The researchers saw this as a problem of low precision and recall: too few misleading posts were getting corrected, and even when notes appeared, many weren't targeting actual misinformation. As Poynter noted, "This is not the kind of precision and recall figures that typically get a product shipped at a Big Tech platform." Meanwhile, Germany's Alexander von Humboldt Institut für Internet und Gesellschaft, a research institute based in Berlin analyzed nearly 9,000 community notes in the run-up to the country's federal elections in February this year, and found that "community notes follow political patterns." The institute said, "Users who write notes are not free of political views. Their assessments and comments may therefore be influenced by their own interests or ideological biases." Poynter's Mahadevan explained in an interview with DW's fact-checking team how people may be gaming the system: when someone new joins Community Notes, X assumes they're unbiased because they haven't rated many notes yet. "Bad actors and troll farms have figured out you can flood the system with new accounts to upvote certain viewpoints and get those notes published," says Mahadevan. Another potential problem with notes is speed. A study by the Digital Democracy Institute of the Americas (DDIA), which analyzed over 1.76 million notes across 55 languages from January 2021 to March 2025, found that while publication speed has improved — from over 100 days in 2022 to an average of 14 days in 2025 — that's still too slow to help stop the spread of disinformation. Falsehoods spread within hours, not days. For example, a November 2023 Bloomberg analysis during the Israel-Hamas war found that relevant community notes took over seven hours to appear, with some taking as long as 70 hours. In breaking news situations, where users are looking for quick and reliable information online, this might be too long. Community notes do help clarify misinformation; however, sometimes, they mislead. But their overall usage is declining, and that's where X's strategy can come into question. According to Grok, X's AI chatbot, in spite of a decline in community notes, over 1 million users were contributing to Community Notes by May 2025. But Mahadevan calls this a façade, pointing out two opposing trends: contributor numbers are rising, but the number of published notes is falling. He describes X's approach as a kind of "Ponzi scheme" constantly adding new users to keep the system active, while the actual fact-checking effectiveness declines. With platforms like Meta and TikTok now copying X's community notes model, experts warn that the risks are growing. At its core, community notes depend on ordinary users having the skills to fact-check complex claims. Mahadevan puts it bluntly: "We live in a very media-illiterate society, and people have a tough time determining what's a trustworthy source." Therefore, without sufficient safeguards, such systems risk amplifying misinformation instead of stopping it.