Critics describe Israel as a political entity that can only survive with repression and state-sanctioned violence.
Israel has been in a state of near-perpetual war for decades, receives billions of dollars a year in aid and weapons, and has consistently broken international law by expanding its occupation and settlements.
Governments and international human rights organisations have called for war crimes investigations into Israel’s military offensive in Gaza.
Yet, for leader Benjamin Netanyahu, it is “the only democracy in the Middle East”, a view often repeated by supporters.
Critics say Israel is a political entity that can only survive with repression, the denial of rights, and violence.
So is Israel a normal state? Could it be defined as a fragile state? Or does it have the characteristics of a failed state?
Corruption trial of Israeli PM Netanyahu resumes
Qatar calls for international probe into ‘Israeli crimes’ in Gaza
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Is Israel criminalising Palestinian thoughts too, amid Gaza war?
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Israel is using the same tactics in Gaza that al-Assad employed in Syria
Presenter: Cyril Vanier
Guests:
Ali Abunimah – Co-founder of the Electronic Intifada, an independent online news publication focusing on Palestine
Paul Turner – President and executive director of the Fund For Peace, a non-profit research organisation that produces the annual Fragile States Index
Ilan Pappe – Israeli historian and author of, The Idea of Israel: A History of Power and Knowledge
Al Jazeera
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