Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu finds himself increasingly pitted against the entire region as his hardline stance on Qatar unites both adversaries and allies in opposition. An emergency summit in Doha is the culmination of this widespread backlash, demonstrating just how much his recent actions have isolated him on the world stage.
Netanyahu’s decision to authorize a strike in Doha and his subsequent ultimatum to the Qatari government have been met with a rare display of regional unanimity. The move has been condemned not only by predictable critics but also by the UAE, which has signed a peace deal with his government, and even by the U.S. administration, which has called the attack unhelpful.
This has placed Netanyahu in a difficult position. His domestic political narrative may benefit from a tough stance on Hamas, but the international diplomatic cost is proving to be immense. He has succeeded in creating a unified front in the Middle East—one that is arrayed against his own policies.
The Doha summit formalizes this opposition. The collective voice of the Arab and Islamic world, amplified by the concerns of his key allies, presents a significant challenge to Netanyahu’s leadership and his strategic vision for the region. His confrontational approach has, for now, resulted in a strategic own goal.
