
After Iran, pressure mounts on Netanyahu to end Gaza war
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's rise in popularity during the war with Iran may already be fading, as pressure mounts at home to end the conflict in Gaza.
Netanyahu claimed victory over the Islamic republic in the 12-day war that ended with a ceasefire last week, after President Donald Trump ordered US warplanes to join in bombing Iranian nuclear sites.
Political scientist Assaf Meydani, in a column on Israeli website Ynet on Saturday, said that alongside a "victory for both Trump and Netanyahu" in Iran, the Israeli leader "will have to explain a series of failures".
Most notable among them, according to Meydani, is Netanyahu's "failure to end the campaign in Gaza", where Israel has been fighting to crush the Palestinian militant group Hamas since October 2023.
"Hamas, though battered, has not been destroyed, and 'Swords of Iron' has become prolonged attrition," Meydani said, using Israel's name for its military campaign in the Gaza Strip.
"The people of Israel are strong, but tensions are simmering."
Israelis fearful of the threat of a nuclear Iran rallied behind Netanyahu as he led the campaign against Israel's longtime rival. Now that that war is over, domestic and international pressure has resumed to secure an end to the fighting in Gaza.
A public opinion poll published by Israel's Kan public broadcaster the day after Tuesday's ceasefire with Iran suggested a rise in support for Netanyahu.
But while his approval ratings went up compared to previous polls, 52 percent of respondents in the Kan survey still said they wanted Netanyahu -- Israel's longest-serving prime minister -- out of office.
Nearly two-thirds of those surveyed said they wanted the Gaza war to end, compared to 22 per cent who favoured continuing the fighting.
Israeli newspaper Maariv said Friday that its polling showed a "surge" for Netanyahu immediately after the ceasefire with Iran had "evaporated almost entirely" within days.
In the coastal hub of Tel Aviv on Saturday, thousands of people gathered to demand a ceasefire deal that would bring home the dozens of hostages still held in Gaza since Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack that triggered the war.
Liri Albag, who was released from captivity in January under a short-lived truce, told the crowd that Netanyahu and Trump "made brave decisions on Iran. Now make the brave decision to end the war in Gaza and bring (the hostages) home."
'Terrible failures'
Trump wrote on Saturday on his Truth Social platform that "Netanyahu is negotiating a deal with Hamas that will include the release of the hostages."
On Sunday, he added: "MAKE THE DEAL IN GAZA. GET THE HOSTAGES BACK!!!"
On the same day, Netanyahu said that the war with Iran had created "opportunities" to free the remaining hostages.
Netanyahu has also faced renewed pressure from one of his political rivals, former prime minister Naftali Bennett.
Criticising the Netanyahu government's "inability to decide" on Gaza, Bennett called for "a comprehensive agreement that includes the release of all the hostages" to end "the terrible impasse and political confusion".
"Netanyahu must step down. He has been in power for 20 years... that's far too long", Bennett told Israel's Channel 12 in an interview that aired on Saturday.
"The people want change, they want calm," added Bennett, who is widely expected to run for office again in the next elections, scheduled for late 2026.
Gil Dickman, a prominent activist demanding action by Israel to secure the release of the hostages, said that while "the operation in Iran was a success", Netanyahu had "failed" to "make people forget his responsibility" for failing to prevent Hamas's unprecedented 2023 attack.
Dickman, whose cousin Carmel Gat was killed in captivity and her body retrieved from Gaza in August, told AFP that Netanyahu's "terrible failures and the abandonment of the hostages will not be forgotten".
Expressing "cautious optimism" after Trump's recent remarks, Dickman said there was "apparently an opportunity to end the war".
"We couldn't save my cousin, but we can still save those who are still alive in Gaza."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
2 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Hamas official says they has not heard from Israel on proposed ceasefire deal for last month
Senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said that they had received no response in the last four weeks about a ceasefire deal they had proposed to Israel, Al Jazeera reported on Monday. Hamdan said Hamas were determined 'to seek a ceasefire that will save our people, and we are working with mediators to open the crossings'. They also said that the US 'continues to send uncomfortable messages as an honest broker' and they had also not heard 'a clear position from Washington condemning Netanyahu's rejection of the ceasefire proposal' in the last four weeks. Al Jazeera also reported that Hamas believed that the Palestinian people should have their right to a sovereign state honored.


Middle East Eye
2 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Netanyahu to meet with Trump on July 7
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will visit the White House for talks with President Donald Trump on July 7, AFP reported on Monday citing its sources as a US administration official. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said earlier on Monday that Netanyahu had "expressed interest" in what would be his third meeting with Trump since the Republican returned to power in January, and that both sides were working on a date. The visit comes as Washington presses for a ceasefire in Gaza. The ICC issued arrest warrants last November for both Netanyahu and former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, accusing them of war crimes and crimes against humanity over Israel's ongoing war in Gaza.


The National
2 hours ago
- The National
UK slams Israel for 'inhumane' aid delivery system in Gaza
Britain on Monday condemned Israel's new aid delivery system in Gaza as 'inhumane,' referencing reports of hundreds of Palestinians killed while attempting to access food and humanitarian supplies. 'The suffering in Gaza is appalling and cannot continue. Israel's aid delivery measures are inhumane,' said Fergus Eckersley, the UK's political co-ordinator to the United Nations. 'The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's operations, which are supposed to be saving lives, are themselves leading to mass casualties. Starving people who are desperate to feed their families are told food awaits them, but over 500 have reportedly been killed trying to access it.' Many Gazans said they have to walk for hours to reach the four appointed sites by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), meaning they must start travelling well before dawn if they are to stand any chance of receiving food. The Israeli military acknowledged on Monday that Palestinian civilians were harmed at aid distribution centres in Gaza, saying that instructions had been issued to forces following 'lessons learnt'. Previously, the military has said it fires warning shots at people who move suspiciously or get too close to troops, including while they are collecting aid. Since June 17, at least 580 Palestinians have been killed either trying to reach GHF distribution points or waiting for other aid convoys, Khaled Khiari, assistant secretary general for the Middle East, told Council members. Mr Khiari also said that the level of suffering and brutality in Gaza is 'unbearable', and the continued collective punishment of the Palestinian people is 'unjustifiable'. 'Civilians are being killed while simply trying to receive aid amid life-threatening famine. They are forced to flee time and again although no place in Gaza, as we know, is safe for civilians,' said Slovenia's UN envoy Samuel Zbogar. The World Food Programme reported that one in five people IN Gaza faces catastrophic levels of hunger, and more than 90,000 women and children urgently require treatment. The Palestinian deputy envoy to the UN, Majed Bamya, said to Council members: 'What if these people that you saw on your TVs every night and every day were Israelis starving, trying to get aid? Gaza was the most densely populated area on earth, with over two million people living in the Gaza Strip. They now are squeezed on 16 per cent of that area to render them more desperate, to force them to leave their land.' Israel has pushed for the GHF to replace the current UN-co-ordinated aid system, accusing Hamas of diverting assistance to sustain its rule. The US has backed these claims, but the world body says there has been no systematic aid theft. Israel's ambassador Danny Danon said the GHF has offered the United Nations full data-sharing, joint logistics and transparent monitoring. 'What has the response been from the Secretary General [Antonio Guterres] and other officials?' Mr Danon asked. 'We heard it today: indifference, defamation and obstruction.' In a letter sent last week to Mr Guterres, the head of the GHF Johnnie Moore urged the world body to engage 'immediately and directly' with the organisation, says it had a proven ability to distribute aid effectively. When asked by The National whether the UN had responded, spokesman Stephane Dujarric said: 'We're in the process of responding, but our public message and our private message is the same.' Mr Dujarric confirmed that senior UN officials had met GHF representatives in Israel, adding: 'We were invited in Israel to hear from the GHF and we went, because we don't refuse these kinds of meetings.' However, he reiterated concerns over safety: 'Our concerns continue. I think we've all seen what is happening again. We're not saying that GHF should not operate. What we're saying is that whether it's GHF or others, they need to operate in ways that are safe. And I think everyone can see that currently it's not safe. There's no need to reinvent the wheel.'