Israeli newspaper’s political cartoon sparks outrage over 9/11 imagery

A cartoon appearing in an Israeli newspaper is under fire. (Haaretz.com)
A cartoon appearing in an Israeli newspaper is under fire. (Haaretz.com)

An editorial cartoon in Israel’s Haaretz newspaper is drawing criticism for using Sept. 11 imagery to depict U.S.-Israel relations under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

In it, a character resembling Netanyahu is seen flying a small plane into a building that resembles a World Trade Center tower. An American flag flies atop the skyscraper.

The cartoon, which appeared Thursday, comes after the Israeli leader was reportedly criticized by an Obama administration official as being a "chickensh--."

The paper, and its political cartoonist Amos Biderman, faced widespread criticism on Twitter.

Biderman defended his work in a tweet: "The message is that Bibi is arrogantly and wantonly destroying Israel's ties with the U.S. and leading us to a disaster on the scale of 9/11.”

Biderman later told Haaretz that he “wasn’t sufficiently aware of the great sensitivity that 9/11 holds for Americans."

The cartoon, he added, was a criticism of the controversial right-leaning politician.

"I was mocking Bibi," he said. "He's been acting like a bull in a china shop with the United States, which is Israel's most important strategic asset."