
PETER VAN ONSELEN: Tony Burke's childish and VERY rehearsed attack on Israel's Netanyahu will have consequences for Australia
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.
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.
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.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Wales Online
37 minutes ago
- Wales Online
Israel calls up 60,000 reservists with invasion of Gaza's largest city imminent
Israel calls up 60,000 reservists with invasion of Gaza's largest city imminent Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has ordered the Israeli military to prepare for a major ground assault on Gaza City, where almost half of the territory's displaced residents are now sheltering Almost half of all people surviving in Gaza live in Gaza City (Image: Getty) Israel's military is preparing to launch a major ground offensive on Gaza City, with thousands of troops being positioned as part of "preliminary actions" to seize the densely populated civilian zone. 60,000 Israeli citizens have been mobilised for active service ahead of the substantial assault on Gaza's largest city, where nearly half of the territory's displaced population is currently taking refuge. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will convene a security cabinet meeting this week (August 21) to secure approval for the military operation on Gaza City, where 70 per cent of all structures have sustained damage following repeated air strikes and a catastrophic siege in 2024. This cabinet session will not address the ceasefire agreement accepted by Hamas earlier this week, which Netanyahu has declined to discuss, according to Haaretz reporting. The Prime Minister's office stated instead: "Netanyahu has ordered the timetable for taking over the last terrorist strongholds and defeating Hamas." The estimated death toll in the territory now exceeds 62,000 during the 21 months of Israel's response to the October 7 terror attacks, when militant groups from Gaza killed 1200 Israeli soldiers and civilians, whilst taking 240 hostage. After months of food aid restrictions and with no conclusion to the conflict in sight, 266 Gazans have now perished from starvation, 122 of those who starved to death have been children according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Thousands of Israeli soldiers have begun deploying to areas near Gaza City ahead of a new offensive (Image: Getty) Hamas, reacting to Israel's preparations to seize and control Gaza City, declared the offensive "will fail, just as previous military operations have." Their spokesperson further stated that the assault "aims to destroy the remaining foundations of life in Gaza." Article continues below The banned terror organisation continued: "Netanyahu's disregard for the mediators' proposal and his failure to respond to it proves that he is the true obstructionist of any agreement, that he does not care about the lives of [Israeli captives], and that he is not serious about their return." IDF troops are already positioned close to the major city, with forces gathering in Jabalia and Zeitoun, where military spokesperson Brigadier General Effie Defrin cautioned: "We will deepen the damage to the terror infrastructure above and below the ground and sever the population's dependence on Hamas." This proposed ground offensive will unfold in a city that has already been "reduced to dust," according to one local who spoke to Al Jazeera. "There is no form of life if we wish to return. "We can't find water or homes, we can't even live in tents." Israel's armed forces have indicated they will instruct all civilians to leave Gaza City and move to humanitarian areas in the south, where many of the Palestinian territory's two million displaced people are already taking refuge. In this section of Gaza, analysis by BBC Verify and other organisations has revealed Israeli bulldozers and controlled demolitions flattening districts that previously housed tens of thousands of residents. Article continues below Numerous allies of Israel have criticised the proposed occupation of Gaza City, along with Prime Minister Netanyahu's strategy for military control of the entire Gaza Strip, which surfaced following the collapse of ceasefire negotiations last month. France's President Macron declared on Wednesday that the offensive "can only lead to disaster for both peoples and risks plunging the entire region into a cycle of permanent war".


Daily Record
37 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Netanyahu convenes security cabinet as Israel prepares ground assault on Gaza City
Israel's military is set to launch a major ground assault on Gaza City, with tens of thousands of soldiers being sent as part of "preliminary actions" to occupy the heavily populated civilian area Israel's military stands ready to launch a massive ground assault on Gaza City, with thousands of troops being positioned as part of "preliminary actions" to seize the densely populated civilian zone. 60,000 of Israel's citizens have been mobilised for active service ahead of the major offensive on Gaza's largest city, where nearly half of the territory's displaced population are now taking refuge. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will convene a security cabinet meeting this week (August 21) to secure approval for the military operation on Gaza City, where 70 per cent of all structures have been damaged following relentless airstrikes and a catastrophic siege in 2024. This cabinet gathering will not be addressing the ceasefire agreement accepted by Hamas earlier this week, which Netanyahu has declined to discuss, according to Haaretz reporting. The Prime Minister's office stated instead: "Netanyahu has ordered the timetable for taking over the last terrorist strongholds and defeating Hamas." The estimated death toll in the territory now stands at over 62,000 in the 21 months of Israel's response to the October 7 terror attacks, where militant groups from Gaza killed 1200 Israeli soldiers and civilians, while taking 240 hostage. After months of food aid restrictions and with no conclusion to the conflict in sight, 266 Gazans have now perished from starvation, 122 of those starved to death have been children according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Hamas, reacting to Israel's preparations to seize and control Gaza City, declared the offensive "will fail, just as previous military operations have." Their spokesperson went on to say that the assault "aims to destroy the remaining foundations of life in Gaza." The banned terror organisation continued: "Netanyahu's disregard for the mediators' proposal and his failure to respond to it proves that he is the true obstructionist of any agreement, that he does not care about the lives of [Israeli captives], and that he is not serious about their return." IDF troops are already positioned close to the major city, with forces gathering in Jabalia and Zeitoun, where military spokesperson Brigadier General Effie Defrin cautioned: "We will deepen the damage to the terror infrastructure above and below the ground and sever the population's dependence on Hamas." This intended ground offensive will unfold in a city that has already been "reduced to dust," according to one local who spoke to Al Jazeera. "There is no form of life if we wish to return. "We can't find water or homes, we can't even live in tents." Israel's armed forces have confirmed they will instruct all civilians to leave Gaza City and escape to humanitarian zones in the south, where many of the Palestinian territory's two million displaced people are already taking refuge. In this section of Gaza, analysis from BBC Verify and other organisations has revealed Israeli bulldozers and controlled demolitions flattening areas that were once home to tens of thousands of people. Numerous allies of Israel have criticised the proposed occupation of Gaza City, alongside Prime Minister Netanyahu's strategy for the military to control the entire Gaza Strip, which surfaced after ceasefire negotiations collapsed last month. France's President Macron declared on Wednesday that the offensive "can only lead to disaster for both peoples and risks plunging the entire region into a cycle of permanent war".


Daily Mail
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Revealed: The STAGGERING amount of money Aussie taxpayers will have to fork out to pay for the Brisbane Olympics
Many Aussie taxpayers can't wait for the Brisbane Olympics to begin in 2032 - but they won't be happy to hear they'll be forking out more than $7billion to host the Games. Under a deal struck with the Queensland government, the Commonwealth has agreed to contribute just under half the cost of building when it comes to Games venues and other infrastructure. The federal government will provide $3.43billion for 17 new and upgraded venues for the Games - with the whole bill forecast to cost $7.1billion. Given the long track history of Olympics being subject to huge cost overruns, the eventual total could be far in excess of that. A large proportion of federal government's contribution will be spent on the new 63,000-seat stadium at Victoria Park as well as a 25,000-seat National Aquatic Centre in Spring Hill. In total, 37 venues across 11 Queensland cities will be used to host the 28 Olympic and 22 Paralympic sports. But given some sports won't be determined until an International Olympic Committee (IOC) meeting is staged next year, Games organisers will be forced to create a venue plan while not knowing what sports they are hosting. At the LA Olympics in 2028, there will be six additional sports: cricket, baseball, flag football, lacrosse, squash and softball. In March, Premier David Crisafulli apologised to Queenslanders for breaking a major election promise after announcing the construction of a new stadium as part of Brisbane's $7billion plan for the 2032 Olympics. Crisafulli repeatedly pledged not to build any new stadiums on the campaign trail in the lead-up to last year's state elections. 'It became a choice between the embarrassment of hosting the games at [the run-down Queensland Sport and Athletics Centre] or a new stadium at Victoria Park,' he said earlier this year. 'In the end, the choice was clear. The Games must be held at a new stadium at Victoria Park.' Crisafulli was asked how he planned to respond to claims he had back-flipped on his earlier promises. 'By being honest and copping that on the chin,' he conceded. 'I have to own that, and I will, and I am sorry. (But) it is my decision.' Following the Olympic and Paralympic Games, the new stadium will host home games for the Brisbane Lions and Cricket Australia matches. Brisbane won the rights to host the 2032 Games four years ago when the International Olympic Committee stated the city was its 'preferred candidate' based on its previous successes in hosting international sporting events.