Moshe Phillips is the national chairman of Americans For A Safe Israel (www.AFSI.org), a leading pro-Israel advocacy and education organization.]
Terrorism is not merely tolerated but honored.
April 22, 2025, may be remembered as a turning point in the history of Israeli public diplomacy—and rightly so. On that day, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs harnessed the power of social media to expose the Palestinian Authority as the enemy it is.
From the official @Israel account on X, a powerful statement was posted: “The Palestinian Authority isn’t educating children, it’s indoctrinating them. Maps without Israel. Teachers praising martyrdom. Textbooks that glorify terror. As long as they teach hate, there’s no hope for peace. Stop ignoring it. Stop funding education that leads to terror.”
By directly attributing responsibility for the deeply rooted antisemitism prevalent in P.A.-controlled areas to Mahmoud Abbas and his co-conspirators, Israel took a vital step toward challenging the dangerous myth that a Palestinian state would lead to peace.
Prominent French public intellectual Bernard-Henri Lévy took to X and explained the tragedy that the so-called two-state solution would mean.
His post was quickly retweeted by @Israel. His message deserves to be quoted in full: “If there is a moment when the two states solution is not relevant, it is today! What do we want to tell? That we reward terrorism? That what could not be achieved through peace has been achieved with pogrom? That #Hamas has brought #Israel & the free world to its knees? Come on … .”
The Palestinian Authority isn’t educating children, it’s indoctrinating them.
— Israel Foreign Ministry (@IsraelMFA) April 15, 2025
Maps without Israel. Teachers praising martyrdom. Textbooks that glorify terror.
As long as they teach hate, there’s no hope for peace.
Stop ignoring it. Stop funding education that leads to terror. pic.twitter.com/3PZbGhgevL
That these posts appeared during the week of Yom Hashoah, Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance Day, was no coincidence. More and more Israelis are acknowledging a painful reality: Whether they support Fatah or Hamas, Palestinians overwhelmingly agree that the Jewish state must be eliminated. Their only disagreements are over tactics, not goals.
What, beyond the P.A.’s institutionalized antisemitism, has prompted this new boldness from Israel on social media?
The reasons may never be fully known, but a series of alarming recent events likely played a role, many of which have gone underreported in Western media.
For example, on April 16, Wafa, the P.A.’s official news agency, marked “Palestinian Prisoners’ Day” by glorifying convicted terrorists. They accused Israel of “ongoing genocide” and “war crimes,” and in an Orwellian twist, referred to imprisoned Hamas operatives as “political prisoners.”
Then came French President Emmanuel Macron’s announcement in April that France would recognize a Palestinian state in June, while Israel is still in the midst of fighting to rescue hostages and dismantle Hamas. This move can only be seen as a betrayal.
Things to remember about Hussein al-Sheikh, who was appointed yesterday as the successor to Abu Mazen and is receiving a warm embrace from the Sunni states:
— Israel News Pulse (@israelnewspulse) April 27, 2025
According to court testimony, he was involved in the suicide bombing on King George Street in Jerusalem in March 2002, an… pic.twitter.com/zkJXmh9njz
But is Israel right about the P.A.?
Following the viral tweets, 89-year-old Mahmoud Abbas appeared to signal his choice for an intended successor by appointing Hussein al-Sheikh as vice president of the PLO.
Al-Sheikh’s record speaks for itself. At a January 2023 event celebrating “Palestinian Martyrs’ Day,” he declared: “Even if we have one penny left, it will be spent on the families of the martyrs and prisoners. … They are our purest, most permanent, loftiest and most precious jewel.”
Such words make clear that terrorism is not merely tolerated by the P.A. but honored.
Fatah and Hamas are not ideological opposites; they are partners in terror. Fatah dominates both the PLO and the Palestinian Authority, and while tensions may exist between the two factions from time to time, they typically concern tactics, not the shared goal of Israel’s destruction.
This reality was underscored in July 2024, when Hamas and Fatah representatives met in Beijing, and agreed to form a unity government following the end of the Israel-Hamas war. They released a joint statement affirming their commitment to ongoing collaboration.
The unity pact signed in Beijing leaves no doubt about the true intentions of these two terrorist organizations.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry is right: The Palestinian leadership does not want peace. What they want is Israel’s defeat.
** This article was originally published on JNS.org but was shared with us by the author