The topics that international newspapers focused on in their coverage of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip varied. Some of them were concerned with the economic repercussions of the war, and some of them shed light on American-Israeli relations against the backdrop of the aggression against Gaza.
The American newspaper The Washington Post wrote that the economic consequences of the Israeli war on Gaza will be great for the Israelis, the Palestinians, and the entire region.
She stated that the consequences in Gaza appear severe from now, while some experts estimate that the consequences on the Israeli economy will be worse than the consequences of the Corona pandemic.
On the subject of relations between Washington and Tel Aviv, the New York Times reported information from American and Israeli officials in which they agreed that relations between the two parties had reached a level of disagreement unprecedented in half a century.
The newspaper pointed out that the war on Gaza led to chapters of tension with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, some in public and others behind closed doors, and that the differences included assistants and advisors in the two countries, but they did not result in decisive decisions such as cutting off arms supplies to Israel, as the newspaper reported. American.
As for the French newspaper Le Monde, Jean-Pierre Fillot wrote an article in which he pointed out that prolonging the war on Gaza has become Netanyahu’s goal in order to protect himself from accountability and judicial accountability.
The writer believes that “the long-term war that Netanyahu wants will not only save him internally, but also weaken the chances of US President Joe Biden and his party, with the hope that former President Donald Trump will return to the presidency of the White House.”
The American magazine “National Interest” returned to the October 7 attacks launched by the Palestinian resistance in Gaza on Israel, and wrote that the failure of Israeli intelligence in predicting those attacks was not in collecting security information, but in how it was analyzed and exploited.