Alright, sit down Bibi, because the hypocrisy meter just snapped clean off the wall.
Watching Benjamin Netanyahu wag his finger at Anthony Albanese, accusing him of failing Jewish Australians over the Bondi attack, is like watching an arsonist lecture the fire brigade about smoke safety.
This bloke has the gall, the absolute brass neck, to moralize from overseas while presiding over the single worst security failure in the history of Israel.
October 7 was not some random lightning strike from the blue. Multiple reports, across Israeli media, international intelligence coverage, and even Israeli security circles, have acknowledged that warnings existed. Signals were missed. Threats were underestimated. Decisions were delayed. Whether through arrogance, complacency, or political self-preservation, the system failed catastrophically under his watch.
That massacre happened on his watch. Not Albanese’s. Not Australia’s. His.
Thousands dead, hostages taken, families wiped out, national trauma on a scale Israel had never seen before. And this is the guy lecturing another country’s prime minister about responsibility.
Mate, you were in charge of one of the most sophisticated intelligence and security states on Earth. Mossad. Shin Bet. A fortified border. Surveillance up the eyeballs. Decades of counter-terror expertise. And still Hamas walked straight through and slaughtered civilians.
So spare us the sanctimony.
Albanese did not run Israeli border security. He did not command Israeli intelligence. He did not greenlight policies that weakened internal cohesion or diverted resources toward political survival. He did not ignore warnings. He did not sit in the chair when it all went to hell.
And yet here comes Bibi, pointing the finger like a scolding school principal, accusing Australia of moral failure.
Here’s a little reality check. When you point one finger, three are pointing straight back at you.
You want to talk about leadership. Leadership is accountability. Leadership is owning catastrophic failure, not outsourcing blame to foreign governments to distract from domestic reckoning.
Instead of facing an independent inquiry into October 7, instead of standing in front of your own people and saying “I failed”, you lash out at everyone else. Journalists. Protesters. International leaders. Even allies. Anyone to keep the spotlight off yourself.
That is not leadership. That is political survival mode with a body count.
And dragging the Bondi tragedy into this is grotesque. Exploiting a local Australian crime to score geopolitical points is cynical, dishonest, and offensive to both Australians and Israelis who actually want truth, not theater.
You do not get to weaponize Jewish grief abroad while dodging accountability at home.
So before you lecture another prime minister about protecting their citizens, maybe take a long, hard look at the biggest security collapse in your own nation’s history, the one with your fingerprints all over it.
Because history is not going to remember the finger-pointing.
It’s going to remember who was in charge when everything burned.

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