JERUSALEM — For years, Benjamin Netanyahu sold himself to Israelis as the indispensable man, the only leader capable of holding together Israel’s fractured political system while protecting the nation from enemies abroad and chaos at home.
Now his government is collapsing under the weight of the very alliances he created.
In a humiliating political blow, Netanyahu’s coalition moved Wednesday toward dissolving the Knesset after ultra-Orthodox allies abandoned him during a bitter fight over military draft exemptions for yeshiva students. The political execution order did not come from the opposition, the courts or foreign adversaries. It came from a 96-year-old rabbi who apparently concluded Netanyahu could no longer deliver what he promised.
The unraveling exposes what critics have argued for years: Netanyahu built a government designed not around national unity or long-term stability, but around his own political survival.
To stay in power, Netanyahu handed enormous leverage to ultra-Orthodox factions demanding sweeping exemptions from military service while ordinary Israelis continued sending their sons and daughters into uniform. He empowered religious hard-liners who pushed judicial confrontations that divided the country. He built a coalition so dependent on ideological extremes that the government became incapable of governing anyone except its own factions.
Now the bill has come due.
The crisis centers on one of the most explosive issues in Israeli politics: mandatory military service. As reservists face repeated deployments and the Israeli military struggles under wartime pressure, public anger has intensified over exemptions granted to large segments of the ultra-Orthodox community.
Netanyahu spent years promising secular Israelis security and stability while simultaneously promising his Haredi allies continued protection from conscription. Eventually those promises collided with reality.
According to Israeli reports, Netanyahu privately admitted he lacked the votes necessary to pass legislation preserving the exemptions demanded by ultra-Orthodox parties. That admission appears to have shattered support from influential rabbinical leader Rabbi Dov Lando, whose reported withdrawal of confidence sent Netanyahu’s coalition into free fall.
The collapse has fueled accusations that Netanyahu governed through political dependency rather than leadership. Critics say he repeatedly postponed difficult national decisions in order to preserve his coalition, allowing divisions over military service, judicial reform and religion to deepen while focusing primarily on remaining in office.
Opposition leaders wasted little time attacking the government’s collapse. Benny Gantz called it the failure of one of the worst governments in Israeli history, while Yair Lapid signaled his bloc was already preparing for elections.
But the damage to Netanyahu may go beyond another political setback.
For decades, Netanyahu cultivated an image as Israel’s ultimate political survivor, a master tactician capable of escaping scandals, elections and internal revolts that would destroy other leaders. Yet this crisis cuts deeper because it reveals the limits of transactional politics.
He empowered factions he could no longer control.
He made promises he could no longer keep.
And in the end, the coalition he built to guarantee his survival may have become the instrument of his political humiliation.
Israel now heads toward another possible election with a fractured electorate, rising public frustration and no clear governing majority in sight. Polls suggest Netanyahu’s right-wing bloc may remain powerful, but potentially too weak to govern alone.
That uncertainty leaves Israel trapped in the same cycle that has consumed its politics for years: unstable coalitions, ideological warfare and leaders focused more on political preservation than national consensus.
For Netanyahu, the symbolism could not be more damaging. The man who once portrayed himself as the guardian of Israeli stability now leaves behind another collapsing government, another divided parliament and another nation preparing for political paralysis.
And this time, even his closest allies decided he was no longer worth saving.







