Updated
Updated · The Jerusalem Post · May 31
Ben-Gvir Draws Criticism With Flotilla Detainee Visit as 500,000 Voters Back His Hard-Line Politics
Updated
Updated · The Jerusalem Post · May 31

Ben-Gvir Draws Criticism With Flotilla Detainee Visit as 500,000 Voters Back His Hard-Line Politics

3 articles · Updated · The Jerusalem Post · May 31
  • Itamar Ben-Gvir’s visit to flotilla detainees was portrayed as a deliberate political move, not a misstep, and critics said the images of an Israeli minister confronting people in custody worsened Israel’s international standing.
  • The intervention also cut across an already decided cabinet policy on handling and removing the detainees, reinforcing accusations that Ben-Gvir favors personal, headline-driven gestures over collective government discipline.
  • Support for that approach remains substantial: about 500,000 Israelis backed Ben-Gvir’s alliance, reflecting a constituency shaped by years of attacks, failed peace efforts and disillusionment with restraint.
  • The report argues that history—from the Oslo era to the 2005 Gaza disengagement and the Oct. 7, 2023 attack—helps explain why many Israelis see deterrence-first politics as realism even when Ben-Gvir’s tactics trigger diplomatic friction.
With sanctions mounting and a UN blacklisting, can Israel's 'peace through strength' strategy achieve lasting security or just deeper isolation?
As Israel reportedly attacks Lebanon to torpedo a U.S.-Iran peace deal, what is preventing a full-scale regional war from erupting?
How does Ben-Gvir's domestic support, rooted in national trauma, coexist with global outrage over alleged detainee torture and sexual violence?