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A letter from the editor-in-chief
 
Double trouble: Trump and Netanyahu meet again
Trump, Netanyahu and Gallant
Esther Solomon.   Esther Solomon
Editor-in-chief, Haaretz English
'Congratulations on history's greatest comeback!' That was the breathless response by Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Donald Trump's second presidential election victory. And Netanyahu knows something about historic comebacks.
 
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Most recently, he made it back to power after a year in opposition while facing a criminal trial and subjecting Israelis to five elections in four years. But his most 'historic' comeback has been his political survival, his rehabilitation in the polls and his intensifying centralization of power since presiding over Israel's greatest calamity, October 7.

And Netanyahu made a further move to bolster his single-handed grip on power yesterday, conveniently timed for while America was gripped by the presidential election results. Netanyahu's firing of Defense Minister Yoav Gallant during wartime, the last gate-keeping adult left in a senior position in the government, was a clear statement of purpose: Israel's government solely exists to sustain, protect and defend the prime minister's political career.

Israel is ruled by a more-than-simply-aspiring autocrat and annexationist touting "total victory" while America will soon be governed by a similarly authoritarian and exclusionist MAGA demagogue. How these two disastrous leaders' worldviews and policies will coalesce or conflict will have a fateful impact on Israel, the Palestinians and the wider Middle East - from the wars devastating the region to the nature of the societies that will emerge in their wake.

Esther Solomon
Editor-in-chief, Haaretz English
Republican Presidential nominee former President Donald Trump holds hands with former first lady Melania Trump at an election night watch party, , Nov. 6, 2024, in West Palm Beach.
 
'I also have a very good relationship, as you know, with President Putin,' Trump declared earlier this year, standing alongside Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenkyy
Outgoing Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, right, next to Benjamin Netanyahu at an event last week.
 
Einav Zangauker protesting with a poster of her son in Tel Aviv on Tuesday night.
A demonstration in Tel Aviv on Tuesday, after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sacked his defense minister, Yoav Gallant.
 
Thousands block Ayalon Highway in Tel Aviv, on Tuesday
Madeline Bushnell, left, and Auden Meyer dropping off their ballots at the polling station that serves UC Berkeley, on Election Day.
 
A placard depicting U.S. President Joe Biden during a protest in support of Lebanon and Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, near the U.S. embassy in Amman, Jordan, last week.
Feldstein pictured walking behind Netanyahu, wearing a black t-shirt, on the way to a situation assessment discussion at one of the IDF's bases, in June.
 
An NYPD officer standing in front of an image of Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump outside Madison Square Garden last week.
 
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