While the Zionist regime is always trying to present itself as the strongest regime in the region, its internal situation is very chaotic. Experts say, Israel is on the verge of a civil war.
This is reflected in the speeches of Zionist officials, the latest of which is the speech of Gaddon Saer, the leader of the New Hope Party, who said that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is leading the regime to civil war. She was speaking after a group of supporters of Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party attacked members of the right-wing New Hope party during a rally, which experts said was a sign of widespread violence in Israeli society.
For this reason, fears of a civil war in the Zionist regime are growing day by day, especially after the popular demonstrations against Netanyahu, in which people demanded his removal for incompetence in solving problems, being accused of corruption and receiving bribes. In addition, the number of unemployed in Israel is about one million and prices have risen sharply.In this context, a number of Zionist media outlets called Netanyahu’s policies dangerous for the Israeli regime and wrote that these policies increase violence and lead the regime to civil war.
The continued onslaught by Netanyahu and his emissaries on the rule of law, on law enforcement authorities, the courts and all other state symbols makes the current tensions particularly explosive. The campaign has yielded considerable success. Many in Israel no longer trust any state institution, and many believe the police have framed Netanyahu, the state prosecution and the attorney general have plotted to bring him down with an unfounded corruption indictment and the demonic left, albeit its almost extinct status, is conspiring to restore its glory days by a forceful takeover of the government.
Netanyahu’s opponents share with his followers the same sense that the institutions of the state are bankrupt. The anti-Netanyahu protest began some three years ago, but did not take off. It was limited to several small groups that mainly focused on the prime minister’s alleged corruption, but failed to attract broad support. The coronavirus outbreak and its economic destruction broke the dams, catapulting tens of thousands of young Israelis into the streets and turning what was largely a niche protest into a growing threat to Netanyahu’s hold on power. The regular demonstrations outside Netanyahu’s official Jerusalem residence quickly expanded and intensified, prompting smaller, spin-off protests across the country as tens of thousands took up positions at hundreds of intersections and bridges waving the blue-and-white state flag as well as black flags and calling for Netanyahu’s resignation. Thousands have appended the word “go” to their Facebook profile photos in recent days — as in, “Netanyahu, go away.”
Netanyahu is doing all he can to block the protests, mobilizing the spread of coronavirus infections to serve his ends. Sources within the ministerial coronavirus crisis cabinet have reported repeatedly that the ban on protests that he managed to push through is of far more interest to Netanyahu than the fight against the pandemic.