Ceasefire offers Israel opportunity to end its international isolation

Palestinians gather at a street market during a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Gaza City, October 12, 2025. REUTERS/Ebrahim Hajjaj/File Photo

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A ceasefire in Gaza is raising hopes among many in Israel
that the country can begin to repair its image abroad, after months of
deepening isolation due to the toll of the two-year conflict.
Public opinion in the West has shifted significantly since
the war erupted following the Islamist group Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack on
Israel, in which some 1,200 people were killed and 251 taken hostage.
Outcry has steadily grown over the humanitarian cost of
Israel's offensive and several Western nations have publicly recognized a
Palestinian state in recent months – despite staunch opposition from
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government and Washington.
Foreign polls have shown weakening support for Israel's
military campaign, even in its most important ally, the United States. More
than 67,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, according to the enclave's
health officials.
Reuters spoke to 13 current and former Israeli officials and
experts who acknowledged that the humanitarian toll of the conflict has had a
major reputational cost for Israel. Several expressed hope that the release
this week of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners and detainees as part
of a first phase of the Gaza accord could start the process of reviving
Israel’s reputation.
"This could help Israel regain some of the empathy and
legitimacy it lost during the war," one Israeli official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said this week.
Peter Lerner, a former Israeli military international
spokesperson, said that would require policy action on the part of Netanyahu’s
government, rather than just words.
He called for "a clear, credible commitment to peace,
protection of innocent lives, respect for international law, and a serious
investment in regional and humanitarian partnerships."
Netanyahu's office did not respond to a request for comment.
The prime minister did not attend a summit in Egypt on Monday, meant
to discuss steps towards a permanent end to the Gaza war, citing "the
timing's proximity to the beginning of (a Jewish) holiday".
A study published on October 3 by the Pew Research Center –
a Washington-based think tank - found that 39% of Americans said Israel was
going too far in its military operation against Hamas, up from 31% a year ago
and 27% in late 2023.
Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar has sounded the alarm
for months in closed-door meetings with Netanyahu and other ministers on the
diplomatic repercussions of the war, according to two officials present at the
meetings and one official briefed on the matter.
The foreign ministry did not respond to requests for
comment.
Netanyahu startled many Israelis last month when he said the
country would need to become more self-reliant in coming years because of the
international backlash against the war. The prime minister, who has repeatedly
ruled out the creation of a Palestinian state, has in the past vowed to
prosecute the war until Hamas was completely destroyed.
"Improving reputation takes a long time of rebuilding
trust," said one Western European diplomat, adding that while the
ceasefire was a "good first step … many more will have to follow".
MANY ISRAELIS WORRIED
ABOUT ISOLATION
More than 66% of Israelis were worried about the prospect of
Israel's possible international isolation, according to an August poll by the
Institute for National Security Studies, a Tel Aviv-based think tank, compared
to 55% in July 2024.
In August, a global hunger monitor said Gaza City
and surrounding areas are suffering from famine, a conclusion Israel contested.
Then a United Nations Commission of Inquiry said, last month that Israel
has committed genocide in Gaza, a charge the Israeli government has repeatedly
rejected, saying its war is on Hamas and not the Palestinian people.
Some of the people familiar with Israel's communication
efforts said failures by Netanyahu's government to engage diplomatically with
concerns in the West about the humanitarian impact of the war in Gaza had
worsened Israel’s isolation.
Some former officials also described a lack of cohesive
messaging and resources. Wartime communication efforts remained split among
different departments, they said, while the country’s national public diplomacy
directorate lacked resources, and some far-right ministers publicly contradict
other officials.
Richard Hecht, a former international spokesperson for
Israel's military, said he believes Israel, whose military has emerged as the
main source of information about the Gaza operation, needed to establish an
effective civilian government organisation for managing international
communication.
The Gaza ceasefire agreement was mediated by the
United States along with Egypt, Qatar and Turkey. Its second phase calls for
the creation of an international body to oversee the implementation of its next
steps - a "Board of Peace" led by U.S. President Donald Trump.
While Trump told Israel's parliament on Monday
that a "long nightmare" for both Israelis and Palestinians was over,
significant obstacles remain to a resolution of the conflict, including the
creation of a Palestinian technocrat administration to run Gaza and the demilitarization of
the Strip.
The ceasefire deal remains fragile: Israel’s military, which
still occupies around half of Gaza, opened fire on Tuesday on Palestinians it
said were approaching its forces.
Pnina Sharvit Baruch, who directs a research program on
Israel and global powers at the Institute for National Security Studies, called
for Israel to build on Trump’s 20-point plan to promote regional
partnerships, stability in Gaza, and renewed engagement with moderate Arab
states.
“Such a course would not only strengthen regional security
but also help Israel rebuild its international standing and credibility,” she
said.
Israel’s relations with the few Arab states it has formal
ties with have been strained by the war in Gaza - including the United Arab
Emirates, which established diplomatic relations with Israel five years ago
under the U.S.-brokered Abraham Accords during Trump’s first term.
Some experts questioned whether Israel’s current right wing
government – which relies on the support of religious ultranationalist parties
– would be able to build bridges with neighboring countries and the Palestinian
leadership.
Emmanuel Nahshon, a former ambassador who served as the
Israeli foreign ministry’s deputy director general for public diplomacy in the
first months of the war, said he believes Netanyahu did not travel to the
summit in Egypt to avoid discussing a two-state solution to the conflict.
"I think the first step to improve Israel's reputation
in the world would be elections and the selection of a new government that will
embark on a new path, which would include learning lessons from the war,"
he added.
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