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