Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

In harsh rebuke, Netanyahu calls Belgian counterpart ‘weak’

Bart De Wever is widely thought to be opposed to the pro-Palestinian policy of his junior coalition partner.

Bart De Wever
Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever visits the European Commission in Brussels on March 25, 2025. Photo by Dati Bendo via Wikimedia Commons.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called his Belgian counterpart a “weak leader” on Wednesday, following the Belgian foreign minister’s announcement of sanctions against Israelis and approval for recognizing a Palestinian state.

Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever “is a weak leader who seeks to appease Islamic terrorism by sacrificing Israel,” read a statement posted on X by the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, quoting Netanyahu. “He wants to feed the terrorist crocodile before it devours Belgium. Israel [...] won’t go along and will continue to defend itself.”

Netanyahu’s harsh-worded rebuke seemed connected to Tuesday’s announcement by Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot of 12 measures against Israel, including a ban on imports from Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria; limits on consular aid to Belgians living in the disputed region; and restrictions on government contracts with Israeli companies. Also in place are entry bans targeting “two extremist Israeli ministers, several violent settlers and Hamas leaders,” as Prévot put it.

Prévot also said that Belgium would recognize a Palestinian state at the U.N. General Assembly in New York this month, though he tied the implementation of such recognition—meaning the establishment of bilateral ties and other steps—to the removal of Hamas from power and the return of Israel’s hostages. These conditions are widely thought to have been introduced by De Wever, a center-right politician who has opposed recognition.

Prévot’s center-left Les Engages political party is a junior coalition partner of De Wever’s New Flemish Alliance. Tensions over Israel have polarized the already uneasy governing alliance between those and other parties in Belgium, whose binational society has added to the instability of governments in recent years, and where coalition talks typically go on for months.

Michael Freilich, a Jewish lawmaker from de Wever’s party, regretted “that matters have come to this,” he wrote on X in reply to Netanyahu’s statement.

Bart De Wever “has always been a true friend of the Jewish people and a consistent defender of Israel’s right to self-defense,” Frelich wrote, noting the conditions for Belgian recognition of Palestinian statehood.

“Belgium is therefore not opting for a French-style unilateral recognition. Belgium remains, in my view, a steadfast ally of all those who strive for peace and genuine coexistence,” Freilich wrote.

Canaan Lidor is an award-winning journalist and news correspondent at JNS. A former fighter and counterintelligence analyst in the IDF, he has over a decade of field experience covering world events, including several conflicts and terrorist attacks, as a Europe correspondent based in the Netherlands. Canaan now lives in his native Haifa, Israel, with his wife and two children.
The IDF struck two crossings used by to smuggle weapons southward, as Israeli forces expand “Operation Roaring Lion.”
U.N. nuclear watchdog chief says inspectors still have not accessed Iran’s new underground Isfahan enrichment facility, leaving the plant’s status unknown.
Israel ramps up ground maneuvers and mass evacuations in Southern Lebanon as it moves to dismantle Hezbollah’s presence south of the Litani River and impose a new “Yellow Line” security reality.
Argentine president denounces Iran on 34th anniversary of Israeli embassy bombing
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem reported that Natufian hunter-gatherers produced 142 beads and pendants uncovered by archaeologists.
Bar-Ilan University researcher Anat Fanti: “Israel’s results reflect resilience, but not the psychological cost of war.”