When we talk about “Israel-haters,” we’re not only referring to the mobs in Tehran or Gaza chanting “Death to Israel” for decades.
We also mean the Western politicians, journalists, academics, and so-called community leaders who went along with those chants—those who dressed up hatred of the Jewish state in the language of diplomacy, “peace processes,” and moral relativism.
For decades, these voices insisted Israel was the obstacle to peace. They told us that normalization with the Arab world could never happen until a Palestinian state was created. They labeled Israel as an aggressor, a colonizer, or worse—and gave moral cover to terror and extremism.
Remember John Kerry’s infamous proclamation: “No, no, no, no! No Arab country will make peace with Israel until there is a Palestinian state.” That thinking has not only been proven wrong—it has been crushed by reality.
The Abraham Accords, launched in 2020, were a seismic shift. Peace and cooperation between Israel and Arab nations—first the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan—demonstrated that shared interests, economic progress, and mutual respect can defeat the lies peddled by extremists and their apologists in the West.
And now, as more countries consider joining the Accords, the victory is not just diplomatic or economic—it is ideological. Every new handshake between Israel and the Arab world is a slap in the face to those who claimed peace was impossible. It’s a blow more powerful than any missile strike, because it undercuts the very narrative that fuels terror.
Israel’s military actions against Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iranian proxies are necessary. But it is Israel’s strength, stability, and moral clarity that are bringing real change to the region—not appeasement, not surrender.
Those who insisted that the path to peace ran through appeasing terror groups now see their worldview collapsing. Containment was never the solution. Victory—military, diplomatic, and moral—is.
And the Abraham Accords are proof.