Hebrew Media: Israel Is Dancing on the Edge of Collapse
Internal fragmentation, Netanyahu’s legal crisis, and deepening social rifts push the Zionist entity toward systemic breakdown
Palestine | PUREWILAYAH.COM - A Hebrew media outlet has warned that Israel is edging dangerously close to collapse, likening the current situation to a desperate attempt to flee an inevitable fate.
In a sharply worded analysis published by Yisrael Hayom, Zionist analyst Nashima Ducker described the entity as “dancing on the edge of the abyss,” overwhelmed by mounting internal threats that have intensified over the past three years.
According to the report, unless Israel’s political and social discourse fundamentally changes, it will be extremely difficult to repair what has already been lost in the upcoming elections.
Growing Internal Threats and Political Decay
The Hebrew analyst noted that recent weeks have seen a significant escalation in threats, particularly those rooted in Israel’s internal divisions rather than external confrontation.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who appeared visibly agitated during his court interrogation, reportedly displayed signs of memory lapses and repeated contradictions. In a move that shocked even his allies, Netanyahu formally requested a presidential pardon from Israeli President Isaac Herzog.
This development has raised serious questions within Zionist political circles:
Is the pardon request merely a calculated political maneuver aimed at securing Herzog’s support in future elections? Or does it reflect Netanyahu’s fear of impending legal and political collapse?
The analyst suggested that the answer may soon become clear, especially amid reported threats to release incriminating material against Herzog should a pardon be granted.
Netanyahu and the Politics of Threat and Chaos
What the report describes as most alarming is Netanyahu’s implicit messaging. Through both his pardon request and an accompanying video statement, Netanyahu effectively warned Israeli society that chaos would continue if he is not granted clemency.
According to the analysis, Netanyahu has signaled that without his “cooperation,” internal divisions would only deepen—an approach that amounts to political blackmail directed at the Israeli public and institutions.
When questioned about these remarks, Netanyahu reportedly made no effort to ease tensions. Instead, once he realized he was wielding a double-edged sword, he reaffirmed that he would not retreat from his previous positions, regardless of the consequences.
From October 7 to a Renewed Internal Crisis
The writer argued that although Israel survived the immediate shock of October 7, it has once again plunged into a phase of acute internal danger. Today’s conditions, the report says, resemble—and may even exceed—the crisis atmosphere of October 6, 2023.
Netanyahu’s ongoing trial has only exacerbated the situation, coinciding with renewed efforts by his cabinet to push through some of the most controversial and divisive legislation in recent history. These moves, the analyst warned, are accelerating polarization and eroding what remains of institutional cohesion.
Unable to Sustain Permanent Threat
In her conclusion, the analyst stated bluntly that Israel cannot continue to exist under a constant state of threat, whether internal or external. The current trajectory, she argued, points toward prolonged instability and potential systemic failure.
The article ends by calling for a prime minister who represents all Israelis, an implicit acknowledgment that Netanyahu has become a central driver of division rather than unity.
These internal Zionist warnings come as Israel remains deeply engaged in region-wide aggression backed by the United States, fueling the ongoing destabilization of West Asia, even as the Zionist entity itself is increasingly consumed by internal decay.
The message emerging from Hebrew media is clear: collapse is no longer a distant scenario, but an approaching reality—one that no level of US political protection or diplomatic normalization can conceal indefinitely. (PW)


