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With Sa'ar leading the charge against Netanyahu, it is certain that the Biden administration will face a very hardline Israeli government, whether or not Netanyahu wins again, writes Mitchell Plitnick.
Biden's failure to reign in Israel is costing him votes as he faces Trump. Richard Silverstein asks: could his foreign policy in Gaza decide the election?
Comment: The rift between Barak Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu​ is real, but America's blind support for Israeli crimes remains almost visceral, no matter who is in the Oval Office, writes Said Arikat in Washington.
Opinion: With a potential prime minister more right-wing than Netanyahu, Biden may have an even harder time pressing Tel Aviv for change, writes Mitchell Plitnick.
As public support falters, those criticising Israel's war on Gaza face extreme repression, arrest, and are even labelled traitors, writes Richard Silverstein.
In Israel's post-war scenario, carpet bombing is replaced by a matrix of surveillance, separation and control similar to the West Bank, writes Anna Saif.
The West's unwavering support for Israel's war on Gaza has left it isolated on the international stage as the Global South bands together, writes Allia Bukhari.
Comment: Netanyahu and his right-wing government know full well that states will ultimately act in their own interests, even if it means leaving Palestinians by the wayside, writes Mitchell Plitnick.
The closure of the university's Qatar campus is part of a campaign by the pro-Israel lobby to discredit Doha's diplomacy on Gaza, writes Marc Owen Jones.
Comment: Netanyahu is inventing ever-more disturbing ways to try and normalise Palestinian displacement, writes Ramona Wadi.