Michelle Mor

The Future of Israel’s Friends

Prosperity and crisis
Prosperity and crisis: Image created by ChatGPT, Aug 2025.

From Paris hostility to a new Israeli axis, the nations that align with Israel will have water, power, food, and survival when the rest of the world falls into crisis.

France’s relationship with Israel has entered a deep freeze. Over the week of August 7 to 12, three separate incidents signaled a sharp turn. El Al’s Paris office was defaced with anti-Israel graffiti. French authorities have for months failed to renew visas for El Al’s security staff in Paris, a problem raised publicly on August 12. An air traffic controller at Charles de Gaulle broadcast “Free Palestine” to El Al pilots shortly after takeoff.

Individually, each could be dismissed as political noise. Together, they revealed a coordinated chill from uneasy diplomacy to open antagonism.

If Israel scales back cooperation with France to the essentials such as tourism and consular services, it will barely affect Israel at all. The gap will be filled quickly because other nations are more than willing to step in. In many cases, those nations will become stronger and more valuable partners than France ever was. This shift is not just diplomatic. It is transformational.

Take Egypt. Israel recently signed the largest export agreement in its history. Thirty five billion dollars to supply one hundred and thirty billion cubic meters of natural gas to Egypt by 2040, starting with twenty BCM annually from 2026 and increasing as infrastructure expands. That is not just energy. That is long-term strategic leverage.

Look to Africa, where Israeli innovation is transforming communities at scale. Israeli solar pumping, drip irrigation, and off-grid power have delivered reliable water and agriculture capacity across multiple countries, with large-scale smart farming projects now underway in places like Madagascar. These are life systems, not pilot programs.

Even to Iran, there is an open hand. Israel has the water technologies to help end Iran’s drought. That is not simply political outreach. That is a godly tool.

This is the core reality. Israel holds every essential technology needed to survive a hostile Earth. Desalination plants that produce limitless fresh water. Wastewater recycling on a scale unmatched anywhere. Agriculture that makes deserts bloom. Solar and storage systems that keep the lights on without imported fuel. Cyber defenses that protect hospitals, utilities, and borders. Medical innovation that keeps populations alive in disaster.

As the climate crisis escalates, these capabilities are the difference between survival and collapse. Countries that align themselves with Israel will have secure access to water, food, power, defense, and life-saving innovation when others do not. In Tehran, the country’s largest river is bone dry. Yemen, actively fighting Israel, is in severe water crisis. Iraq cannot keep the electricity on and faces infrastructure breakdowns daily. These nations are already tasting what hell on earth looks like.

Just as God is gathering His nations together, so is the enemy. Heaven on earth will be here, and so will hell. Hell will be knowing you live in a country with no water, no food, no electricity, and no way forward, while watching the nations aligned with Israel prosper. Those who stand with Israel will have life. Those who stand against will watch it slip away.

France’s shift is a reminder that alliances based on convenience can vanish overnight. The alliances that will matter in the years ahead are the ones that secure survival itself. The choice could not be clearer.

About the Author
Michelle Mor is a professional writer, content strategist, and AI prompt engineer based in northern Israel. She holds a Master’s in Technology in Education and spent 20 years as a teacher. Born in South Africa, she lived through apartheid and strongly opposes the current South African government's campaign against Israel. Today, she develops national English curricula for Israeli students through The Jerusalem Post’s LiteTalk educational division, where she writes weekly news-based lessons focused on current events.
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