Haaretz Emigré: ‘Israel is a Broken Society’

Tel Aviv’s escalation with Iran has made the risks of daily life in Israel more immediate and visible, according to an Israeli journalist who previously worked for Haaretz and left the country after Oct. 7, 2023.

“It was never safe,” Asaf Ronel told Anadolu in an interview. “But when you live inside it, you don’t notice.”

He said it was only after leaving Israel for Berlin that he became aware of the constant underlying stress.

“It took me months to understand why I’m so relaxed here,” he said. “I suddenly had hobbies. Because this layer of fear for your life is gone.”

But, he added, that sense of fear builds gradually over time.

“It accumulates. You keep denying it. You keep trying to maintain a facade of normalcy in your life,” he said. “Like everybody does until they’re broken.”

According to Ronel, the situation has deteriorated sharply in recent years.

He described the Oct. 7 attacks as a turning point that exposed deep vulnerabilities in Israel’s security system.

“The level of collapse of the military establishment on Oct. 7 was obvious,” he said.

At the same time, he argued that Israel’s military response has intensified insecurity.

“The more violence they’re using, it’s only creating more danger to them,” he said.

Ronel also criticized the role of the army more broadly, describing it as “functioning as a machine for oppression and violence against Palestinians and surrounding populations.”

Frequent trips to shelters have become routine, he added, though he stressed that Israeli civilians’ experience differs significantly from that of Palestinians.

“Israelis never dealt with anything similar to the daily life of Palestinians around us,” he said.

‘Israeli media is 99% propaganda’

From Feb. 28 until the current ceasefire, Iranian retaliatory strikes hit multiple locations across Israel, targeting military sites, energy infrastructure and other areas, exposing what analysts describe as mounting pressure on the country’s interception systems.

Strikes penetrated Israel’s multi-layered defenses in multiple districts, including Tel Aviv, Petah Tikva, Bnei Brak, Holon, Arad, Dimona, Nahariya and Haifa.

Ronel said the scale of these developments is not fully reflected in domestic media coverage.

“Maybe the media should tell them that … there’s also the other side that’s quite sophisticated and capable of hurting them directly,” he said.

According to Ronel, Israeli media has failed to convey these realities, focusing instead on military achievements.

“Israeli media is 99% propaganda, self-propaganda,” Ronel said.

“They’re not even aware that they’re doing it,” he added, describing what he called a “level of denial of reality” that has become institutionalized.

He pointed to reports of a growing shortage of the most sophisticated missile interception systems and the military adjusting its defense priorities accordingly.

“The media is not reporting it,” he said.

‘Broken state and society’

Ronel said the current crisis reflects deeper structural problems within Israel that predate the latest escalation.

“It was clear that the country is broken,” he said, pointing to widening gaps in public services, infrastructure and governance.

He also pointed to broader institutional failures, saying basic systems were no longer functioning effectively.

“It didn’t seem like there was anyone who knows how to fix it, at least not in charge,” he said.

He said the events following Oct. 7 reinforced that view.

“And then, a few days later, when the genocide started, it was clear that not only the state is broken, but the society,” he said.

While he said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu should not be seen as the sole cause, he argued that both the government and wider society have moved in the same direction, turning what he described as the “constant state of emergency of the Zionist life” into a condition that has become “much, much more severe.”

Unsafe at home and abroad

Ronel said insecurity is not limited to Israel’s borders, arguing that perceptions of Israeli identity have also shifted internationally.

Saying he had never lived outside Israel for more than a month before Oct. 7, Ronel said he still does not feel safe abroad.

“Because I’m an Israeli, and Israeli identity carries meaning – this meaning now is the meaning of genocide and attempts to destabilize the world economy.”

He predicts that more Israelis will move abroad to “look for ways to live.”

According to recent research conducted by professors at Tel Aviv University, there has been a notable rise in emigration from Israel in recent years.

The research suggests that around 99,000 Israelis left the country in 2023 and 2024, while fewer than 20,000 returned in 2024. More than three-quarters of those who left were under 40.

For Ronel, too, the chances of his family returning are “getting lower and lower.”

CrossFireArabia

CrossFireArabia

Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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Jordan 2007! Elections and Hiccups: Looking Backwards

EDITOR’S NOTE: This article was written more than 18 years again in October 2007 for the 7iber.com online portal and is reprinted her

Its election time! As a good non-totalitarian democrat I love the elections, when they happen that is. What I really love about the elections is the time leading up to their finale when voters go up to the polling stations and vote. Although I’ve never voted in my life, I’ve always carefully watched election campaigns, right from start to finish. They are exciting days, of banners hoisted, constituency meets, mini-rallies and all the rest of it.

Prospective candidates, some running for the very first time and of which we are expected to know and vote for, hoist their banners across streets and roundabouts, screaming at the electorate to vote for them because they are the best candidates.

This is the 15th elections for the 15th Lower House, and parliament in Jordan has consistently been in session since 1989, after a long absence of parliamentary life in the country. I am proud to say I covered the 1993 elections, the 1997 ones, and just about missed the 2003 elections because of being away from Jordan.

In all these years, the excitement never faded. Islamic Action Front candidates continuously stood under the IAF banner, but this was never the case with the other political parties, such as the nationalists, the leftists, the middle-of-the-roaders and the tribalists. Although a lot of parties came on the scene after 1993, like Al Ahad, Al Yaqatha and Al Risala and still many others, for some reason or another, many of their candidates preferred to stand as independents arguing they are known for their own independent political personalities rather than as representatives of their parties.

Is this a wrong attitude? Well, maybe. However, once some of them were elected to the Lower House of Parliament, they revealed their true political colors and supposedly argued on party-political lines. Ironically, most of the electorate never knew what those lines were when the MP was just a candidate running for a seat. Many of these parliamentarians argued that they stood a better chance of getting into parliament as individuals rather than under the banner of their political parties. This is due to the belief that such organizations were still seen as relatively new and unknown, despite the fact that many, including leftists, Arab nationalists and Baathists parties, had existed in the 1960s and 1970s, but many of which were effectively banned.

They may of course have been right in their assumptions as political parties were just made legal in the early 1990s, and have thus needed time to be nurtured. As independents, the negative connotations of belonging to political parties would wither away among the electorates who needed to get used to voting for candidates on party political platforms. But the problem with running on independent tickets is that it actually perpetuated individualism, parochialism and depended on the appeal to family, kinship and tribal relations. In past Jordanian parliamentary elections, and even today, the tribal bloc vote has been very important in deciding who wins and who loses.

The effect of this frustrates the process of developing political parties, which, except for the Islamic Action Front, remains weak, ineffective and are no more than talking shop. They have even been used by established politicians to further their own individual political ends and causes. This stands contrary to the need for building modern, strong political parties designed to make democracy and the democratic experiment effective.

Realizing that there is a lot to say about the tribal vote, sometimes political candidates, even Islamists, have been known to appeal to kinship and family relationships as a means of getting into parliament. Once they do, they start the usual game of political party meandering under the parliamentary dome.

That may also be why election banners and slogans on roads are no more than hackneyed, clichéd phrases emptied from their political content. They are read for what they are: brief formulaic statements, lacking the resonance of strong, vibrant agendas and political manifestos that promise change and development, as is the case with elections in more mature democracies around the world.

Political parties in Europe, for instance, are big machines with national and local clout. Everyone, especially the main personalities, know who they are, what they stand for, and what they hope to do once they form the government, or become the party in the majority. In this part of the world, the political culture, machinations and value systems are different and have to be treated differently.

However, in the final analysis, a political party is a political party in which ever part of the world it belongs to; sharing little differences with its counterparts. That’s why such parties have to be strong, come out of their closed shops and enclosures, and appeal to the masses; become broad-based with clout in order to be listened to by decision-makers.

In all fairness however, we have to be gentle with our political parties by understanding the history and the context of where they came from. It took political parties in the western world, centuries to develop and become the national institutions they are today.
They emerged through political struggles and a great deal of pushing and shoving.

But does that mean we have to take that long? Not necessarily, the element of transition from one era to another can take place quickly, but it has to be supported by the state and government. There has to be a political will for democracy, where parties are nurtured rather than left alone.

Jordan is doing well despite different hiccups, but the Arab world in general has to pull itself by the bootstraps if it is to enter into a meaningful political era where representation, democracy and political pluralism is seen as healthy for a society. Our problem now is to move faster in order to catch up with the rest of the world, and develop politically.

In the meantime, let’s for a minute stop and enjoy the political actions of the electoral campaign.

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Giant Phillippines Volcano Shows no Rest!

Mayon Volcano in the Philippines continued to show signs of intensified unrest, with authorities reporting dozens of volcanic earthquakes and tremors over the past 24 hours while maintaining Alert Level 3, local media reported on Saturday.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (Phivolcs) said that from the volcano, they recorded 51 volcanic earthquakes, 30 volcanic tremors lasting between two and 45 minutes, as well as hundreds of rockfall events and six pyroclastic density current signals, according to local media outlet the Inquirer.

The institute also reported ongoing lava effusion from the crater, with lava flows extending several kilometers along the Basud, Bonga, and Mi-isi gullies.

Short-lived lava fountaining was also observed.

The volcano emitted 1,482 tons of sulfur dioxide on Friday, higher than the previous day’s level, while a volcanic plume drifted southwestward.

Authorities continued to prohibit entry within the 6-kilometer (3.72-mile) permanent danger zone and warned against flying aircraft near the volcano.

The institute warned nearby communities of potential hazards including lava flows, rockfalls, pyroclastic density currents, moderate explosions, and lahars (mud or debris flow) triggered by heavy rainfall. Anadolu

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