PETER VAN ONSELEN: Tony Burke's childish and VERY rehearsed attack on Israel's Netanyahu will have consequences for Australia
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Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke relishes a fight, but his decision to inject himself so forcefully into a diplomatic dispute with Israel raises more questions than it answers.

Yes, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu overstepped the mark by launching a personal attack on Anthony Albanese via Twitter. It was undignified, inflammatory and beneath the office he holds. It was just another example that in the Donald Trump-era anything goes.

But Burke’s response, while headline-grabbing, risks being remembered more as a domestic political performance than serious diplomacy.

‘Strength is not measured by how many people you can blow up or how many children you can leave hungry’, Burke thundered, using a line he’d undoubtedly workshopped as performative. 

It was designed for maximum cut-through, delivered with the moral certainty that plays well to his base.

Yet it jarred.

While Burke sounded like the school kid who tells the teacher ‘he started it’, you’d think a senior politician would realise two wrongs don’t make his comments right.

Foreign policy demands careful calibration, not flourishes that risk inflaming an already combustible situation. 

Home Affairs minister Tony Burke woke up this morning and chose to grab the headlines with a scathing blast at Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu

Home Affairs minister Tony Burke woke up this morning and chose to grab the headlines with a scathing blast at Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu 

If Netanyahu’s late-night Twitter spray was reckless, Burke’s punchy one-liner was childish at best.

The sequence of events matters. Australia denied a visa to far-right Israeli MP Simcha Rothman on the grounds that his rhetoric about Palestinian children crossed a line into hate speech. 

Israel retaliated by suspending visas for Australian officials engaging with the Palestinian Authority. Then Netanyahu escalated the dispute even further, branding Albo weak.

That was the moment where a quiet, measured rebuttal would have carried the most weight internationally and at home, other than amongst the activists, who Burke was seeking applause from.

Defenders of Burke will argue he was standing up for his boss, reframing the idea of strength as moral principle rather than brute force. 

But this misreads the demands of the situation.

Australia’s interests aren’t advanced by rhetorical duels that feed into Netanyahu’s narrative of being under siege from foreign critics. Nor does Australia look more statesmanlike when a senior minister resorts to slogans that, while emotionally charged, do little to advance policy coherence.

Netanyahu's own attack on Australia was undignified, inflammatory and beneath the office he holds

Netanyahu’s own attack on Australia was undignified, inflammatory and beneath the office he holds

There is also the question of consistency. Burke justified Rothman’s exclusion as a matter of values, essential to maintaining domestic social cohesion. 

Yet his own framing, invoking images of children being blown up or left hungry, itself inflames domestic divisions.

When the rhetoric of a senior Labor minister starts to mirror the polarising tone he condemns, the line between principles and politics is blurred.

That does not mean Netanyahu should escape criticism. His decision to take a swipe at Albo on social media was pathetic, a sure sign that he’s feeling the pressure. 

It reduced a legitimate disagreement into a personal slanging match, guaranteeing that the issue would escalate. 

Especially with the likes of Burke the one time university debater eager to try out a workshopped undergraduate retort floating around.

Netanyahu reinforced the perception that Israel’s government has grown defensive and erratic. 

But Burke’s contribution did little to steady the ship. In fact, it ensured the story became less about the merits of Australia’s visa decision and more about the war of words between childish politicians on opposite sides of the world.

The government could have projected firmness without theatrics. Instead, it chose a line that will linger, but not necessarily in the way Burke intended.

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