Home Rachel Avraham Op Ed: How Can Governments Stay in Power During the Corona Pandemic?

Op Ed: How Can Governments Stay in Power During the Corona Pandemic?

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By Rachel Avraham


Countries across the globe are facing challenging times during this Corona pandemic. Globally, nearly ninety million people have been infected with the coronavirus and nearly two million have succumbed to it. Meanwhile, domestic violence has gone up, as has unemployment, economic distress, and mental illness, as nations across the world are locking down their populations.

Democratic and totalitarian governments alike are finding it difficult to keep law and order during these trying times. In the United States, Antifa and other anarchist/Marxist groups and criminals have been allowed to riot freely. The absence of law and order created the conditions for the present electoral crisis in the U.S.

Israel, in the meantime, is heading for another election, the fourth in just two years. The Israeli Knesset has already been dissolved, while the ruling Likud Party has canceled its primaries, a move that is being challenged in court. This comes after Black Flag protesters have been waging demonstrations in Tel Aviv and at the Prime Minister’s home in Jerusalem. Mendi Safadi, who heads the Safadi Center for International Diplomacy, Research, Public Relations, and Human Rights, declared: “It is true that many in the media are blaming Netanyahu for this, but it is just the left’s frustration that is dragging us towards another election, and this has infiltrated the right-wing here as well.”

Safadi claims that after the three previous elections in which the left-wing in Israel rallied around with the slogan “anyone but Bibi” but failed to win, a group of IDF generals was lobbied to enter the government to undermine it from within. Safadi says that this is the true reason behind the coming election. However, Safadi stressed that despite all their attempts, the left in Israel failed to undermine the Netanyahu government: “He [Netanyahu] has eliminated significant obstacles related to Iran, shelled Syria hundreds of times, gotten Israel vaccinated ahead of major countries like France and Germany, and reached peace agreements with five Muslim countries.

It is understandable why the left is frustrated. They cannot beat a leader like Netanyahu at the ballot box,” he said.

Meanwhile, as anarchists take over America’s streets and Israel heads towards yet another election, countries like China and Iran are cracking down upon dissent.

Zhang Zhan, a Chinese citizen journalist, was just sentenced to four years in prison for his COVID-19 reporting.

In Hong Kong, 50 dissidents have been arrested, including the popular businessman Jimmy Lai.

In Iran, as the National Council of the Resistance of Iran reports, more and more Iranians are protesting the dire social and economic situation in their country. In response, the Iranian regime has been killing dissidents abroad, so that they will be unable to inspire protests at home.

This is how such dictatorial regimes are hoping to stay in power, as their populations become more restive.

The question remains, how can any government stay in power as long as COVID plagues our world? The best way for a government to stay in power is by upholding democracy. For democratic leaders, the best way for a government to stay in power is to fight the Multifront War and not neglect any of the 60 fronts that democratic nations are dealing with. Even if you win on one front but you lose the other 59 of these fronts, you will lose your ability to rule.

There are ten external and internal enemies that every democracy faces. They use six forms of warfare in their fight: physical, cultural, economic, legal, demographic, and cyber. COVID is part of physical warfare, which China willingly let spread all over the world. Physical warfare includes kinetic warfare, as well as biological and chemical warfare. If we multiply 10 by 6, we are fighting sixty different wars at once. Thus, even as a democratic nation is dealing with the pandemic, it should not neglect the struggle against its external and international enemies. It should fight these enemies as if there is no pandemic. In this manner, a nation’s enemies cannot take advantage of the pandemic to weaken a democratic society.

Since democratic governments can stay in power only when supported by the people, they must lead with optimism and by giving the people hope that tomorrow will be better. A leader must take steps to ensure that we will not forever remain plagued by the coronavirus. The development of vaccines and their mass distribution is critical because the vaccine is our only means of exiting from this pandemic. In this regard, both President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu should be commended for their efforts.

Governments and leaders should provide support to their suffering populace. They should also offer them words of encouragement to lift their spirits. When the population feels that the government cares about their suffering and is offering them both financial and emotional support during such trying times, they will be less likely to rebel. Both Israeli grants to families with children, and Trump’s $1,200 and $600 to every US citizen was important for the peoples’ morale.

The government should now focus on what can be controlled, and ignore the rest. So, if a government focuses on enforcing good hygiene, masks, and maintaining a six-foot distance, it gives people some sense of control over their lives and makes them feel less helpless about the situation. Nevertheless, the government should not go to the extreme of locking down its population. This creates a sense of hopelessness and despair that leads to an increase in mental health problems and the use of illicit drugs.

Maintaining the social structure is of utmost importance for surviving the coronavirus pandemic. Governments should keep the schools and workplaces open, so the population continues to have a structure. This will also greatly aid the population’s mental health. However, to prevent the massive spreading of the virus, people should wear masks and maintain distance at work and school. Open schools and workplaces would keep the population less restive.

A democratic government should empower its people to survive this horrible ordeal. For this reason, keeping places of worship open and subsidizing psychological support is of utmost importance. These will help the people to mentally survive this pandemic. Every government should remember that depression, not only the pandemic, can kill. Thus, a proper balance should be kept between fighting the pandemic and maintaining the people’s mental health.

For totalitarian governments, the ends justify the means. The only way that they can hope to survive this ordeal is to utilize brute force, to stop their people from revolting. For dictatorships, heavy lock-downs and repression, which may also kill the virus quickly, is the best method. China, as the government-controlled media reports, has been more effective using such methods than Iran, which repressed the population, but failed to suppress the virus. Remember, Iran’s ultimate focus is not on controlling the pandemic, Iran’s focus is on developing nuclear weapons, building ICBMs, and directing its three worldwide terror organizations (Physical, Narcotic, Political).

Sources:

Iranians Continue Protests; at Least Eight Rallies and Strikes on January 10 – Iran News Update

Iran dissident kidnappings send a message, abroad and at home – CSMonitor.com

Chinese citizen journalist jailed for Wuhan virus reporting – Newspaper – DAWN.COM

WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Dashboard – WHO Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Dashboard

Source:The Multifront War


Ken`s new book The Multifront War is out! It is available in 190 countries via Amazon and in also on BNs in the US. Buy it now!

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Rachel Avraham is a political analyst working for the Safadi Center for International Diplomacy, Research, Public Relations and Human Rights, which is run by Mendi Safadi, a former Likud Candidate for the Knesset and a former chief of staff of former Israeli Communication Minister Ayoob Kara. Since 2012, she has been working as an Israel-based journalist and writer, covering Iran, Kurdistan, Turkey, Iraq, Syria, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and other developments in the greater Islamic world. Her articles have appeared in the Washington Times, the Hill, Front Page Magazine, the Daily Wire, the Christian Post, the Baltimore Jewish Times, the Jerusalem Post, Israel Hayom, Ahval and many other publications across the globe. She received her MA in Middle Eastern Studies from Ben-Gurion University. She got her BA in Government and Politics with minors in Jewish Studies and Middle Eastern Studies from the University of Maryland at College Park.