Zionist officials are concerned about declining US support for Israel.
Tamir Heyman, former head of the Israeli military intelligence agency AMAN, and Avishai Ben-Shoshan Gordish, a political analyst for the regime, warned in a report about a potential “strategic chaos” that Israel could face as the second term of US President Donald Trump ends.
They stressed that the Israeli regime should use Trump’s second term to further deepen its cooperation with Republicans before the political landscape in Washington changes and a more critical Democratic administration comes to power that criticizes Israel and its policies in Gaza and the West Bank.
According to the report, the United States is undergoing a profound change in its social and political structure, and the emergence of a progressive wing in the US Democratic Party shows that it now sees the Israeli regime as a symbol of white supremacy and colonialism against the Palestinians.
This shift is reflected in recent polls showing an unprecedented decline in American support for Israel. A Pew poll, the largest American research and polling center, found that 53 percent of Americans now have a negative view of the Zionist occupiers, while support for Israel among young Republicans has fallen to 46 percent.
Among evangelical Christians, who have been the largest support base for the Zionist regime for decades, support has also fallen from 69 percent in 2018 to 34 percent in 2021.
Al-Quds Network wrote that the report argues that the current trend warns that the Zionist regime has turned from a strategic ally into a political “burden” for Washington, especially after the Gaza war and increased criticism in American universities and media.
Meanwhile, Heyman and Gordish went on to call on Israeli officials to take their advice seriously regarding the various challenges facing the Zionist regime in the region.
The authors called for full cooperation with Trump’s plan to end the war in Gaza, arguing that reactivating the remaining aspects of the “Deal of the Century” and continuing the project of normalizing relations between the Israeli regime and Arab countries could pave the way for a lasting agreement in the Gaza Strip, and that relief and reconstruction efforts could serve as a means of exerting political influence.
Regarding Iran, they also called for the continuation of the strategy of maximum economic and military pressure to force Tehran to accept a new nuclear agreement “better than the previous one” and to implement it during the current Trump administration without waiting for a new administration to come to power.
They also claimed that trying to reach an agreement with Damascus would prevent any direct influence from the countries of the resistance axis and Iran, and on the other hand, would open the door for Israel to begin diplomatic relations with this country in the future, thereby ensuring the security of a “stable” regime.

