Bennett Tells Israel to Fire Its PR Firm
A former prime minister says the country's image problem is now a strategic problem — and that the cabinet is making it worse in real time.
On 23 June 2026, Naftali Bennett — prime minister of Israel from June 2021 to June 2022 and now the most vocal former occupant of that office in the country's current debate — delivered a diagnosis of the Israeli government's public-diplomacy posture in unusually blunt terms. The remarks, carried in a series of clips posted to Telegram by the ClashReport channel, were not a polished set-piece interview. They read as a man who has spent four years on the wrong side of a lectern, watching successors mishandle the very stage he once commanded.
Bennett's core claim is uncomfortable for any Israeli government, of any coalition colour: the country's international image is no longer a problem that public-relations spend can fix. It is a structural liability. And the people currently making it worse are, in his telling, the people inside the cabinet who most want to look tough in public. Israel must, he argued, exercise its right and duty to defend itself — but it must also stop electing, retaining, and amplifying ministers whose online behaviour gives the country's critics a daily gift.
The diagnosis, in his own words
Bennett's central claim, in the extended clip posted at 11:56 UTC, is that for the first time since 1948, the brand "Israel" operates as a net negative inside the United States. The phrase is striking, and Bennett is aware of it. He calls the situation a disaster, and uses the word twice. The framing matters because the United States is not just Israel's principal diplomatic protector in international fora; it is also the principal address for the philanthropic, evangelical, and political networks whose goodwill underwrites a substantial share of Israel's diplomatic and material support. A net-negative brand in that market is not a communications problem. It is a balance-of-payments problem with geopolitical consequences.
The second layer of his diagnosis, delivered at 12:02 UTC, is operational: Israel is, in his assessment, the worst country in the world at public diplomacy. He deploys the management-consultant metaphor — if Israel were a PR firm, he says, he would not hire it. The joke is a useful one because it reframes the issue. The question is not whether Israel has sympathetic media allies (it does, particularly in the Anglo-American right-of-center press), nor whether Israeli spokespeople are talented (many are). The question is whether the country's collective signalling is coherent enough to convert sympathy into a positive brand premium, or whether it is actively destroying that premium faster than any spokesperson can rebuild it.
The Ben-Gvir problem, named
The most pointed segment, posted at 12:04 UTC, names a specific cabinet colleague. Bennett describes a pattern in which a minister posts provocative or inflammatory content designed to project strength to a domestic base, after which Bennett — even out of office — finds himself cleaning up the consequences on CNN and the BBC. The mechanism he describes is familiar from any newsroom that covers coalition politics: a single inflammatory post can dominate a news cycle, force ambassadors into reactive statements, and hand foreign ministries of adversarial governments the exact framing they want. Bennett's argument is that this is not an unfortunate side-effect of coalition politics. It is the predictable output of a cabinet that conflates domestic political positioning with state communication.
This is not a marginal complaint. Bennett is articulating a position that has been voiced, in different registers, by Israeli security officials, by Western ambassadors in Tel Aviv, and by editorial boards of major diaspora Jewish newspapers. The difference is that Bennett is naming the trade-off explicitly: the short-term domestic gain of a fire-breathing social media presence is paid for, dollar for dollar, in the long-term loss of diplomatic manoeuvring room.
The Lebanon wrinkle
The clip posted at 12:10 UTC, in which Bennett insists Israel is not a client state and must exercise its right to defend itself in Lebanon, is not in tension with his broader point. It is the precondition for it. Bennett is drawing a line that the public-diplomacy critique can sometimes obscure: the legitimacy of Israeli defensive action in the north, including operations across the Lebanese border, is not contingent on global brand sentiment. The argument is that the country can and must act in its security interest regardless of how the court of international opinion rules — but that the country's leaders should stop, while acting, doing gratuitous damage to the standing that makes those actions diplomatically survivable. In his words, we are surrounded by people who want to murder us. The argument is not that the threat is overstated. The argument is that the response is being delivered in a way that hands the threat free publicity.
What this is, and what it is not
Bennett's intervention is unlikely to change the cabinet's composition or the coalition's internal balance of power. The ministers he is implicitly criticising retain the confidence of a governing coalition. But Bennett is doing something more durable than seeking a personnel change. He is establishing, on the record, that there exists a senior Israeli political figure willing to articulate, in plain language, the gap between Israel's security doctrine and its public signalling. That gap is real, and it is widening. The most plausible alternate reading is that Bennett is positioning himself for a return to office, and that his critique is calibrated for a future primary electorate. The two readings are not mutually exclusive, and the critique holds in either case. The cabinet's signal discipline is not, on the available evidence, improving. Until it does, Israel will continue to fight the war in Gaza, on the northern border, and in the broader regional contest with one hand tied behind its back — not by enemy action, but by the cumulative effect of its own ministers' Twitter accounts.
Desk note: Monexus treats Bennett's remarks as a domestic Israeli political signal, not as a Western or Global South editorial line. Where coverage of the conflict itself follows the established editorial compass — Israeli security concerns as a first-order fact, Palestinian civilian harm as a first-order fact — the framing of this article concerns coalition management and national-branding strategy, both of which are legitimate subjects of analysis.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/ClashReport
- https://t.me/ClashReport
- https://t.me/ClashReport
- https://t.me/ClashReport
- https://t.me/ClashReport
- https://t.me/ClashReport
