"During trips to Israel, US law enforcement agents - including police, Border Patrol, and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) - receive training and instruction from Israeli military, police, intelligence agencies, and private defense companies. Officials visit checkpoints and prisons while learning about Israeli practices of surveillance and racial profiling. These programs facilitate an exchange of what the US-based organization Jewish Voice for Peace has termed "worst practices". The group Researching the American-Israeli Alliance, in partnership with JVP, has demonstrated how counter-terrorism trainings "instill militarized logics of security into the civilian sphere, normalizing practices of mass surveillance, criminalization, and the violent repression of communities and movements the government defines as threatening". Counter-terrorism trainings purport to teach civilian police forces how to protect a civilian populace by using racial profiling and other techniques that cause harm to targeted groups, as honed by Israel through the military occupation of Palestine and the genocide and containment of Palestinian people."
— Shuli Branson, Raven Hudson, Mimi Thi Nguyen: Surviving the Future, p. 195
You can learn more about this cross-training of state violence at deadlyexchange.org/, as referenced by the book.
This is a big reason why the concept of a "two state" solution for Israel would result in the (continued) institutionalization of genocide: the state practice is to commit harm. The point of note here is that it's not the people that define security (which would be social security and focus on maintaining stability and welfare) but it's national security (justifying increased violence on behalf of maintaining its power). Civilians don't pick to make Muslim people, Black people, women and the like the targets of violence - the governments do. And those invested in this power reify it through culture (copaganda is garbage).
Surviving the Future - BookWyrm
Surviving the Future is a collection of the most current ideas in radical queer movement work and revolutionary queer theory. Beset by a new pandemic, fanning the flames of global uprising, these queers cast off progressive narratives of liberal hope while building mutual networks of rebellion and care. These essays propose a militant strategy of queer survival in an ever precarious future. Starting from a position of abolition--of prisons, police, the State, identity, and racist cisheteronormative society--this collection refuses the bribes of inclusion in a system built on our expendability. Though the mainstream media saturates us with the boring norms of queer representation (with a recent focus on trans visibility), the writers in this book ditch false hope to imagine collective visions of liberation that tell different stories, build alternate worlds, and refuse the legacies of racial capitalism, anti-Blackness, and settler colonialism. The work curated in this book spans Black queer life in the time of COVID-19 and uprising, assimilation and pinkwashing settler colonial projects, subversive and deviant forms of representation, building anarchist trans/queer infrastructures, and more. Contributing authors: zuri arman, Ryan Becker, Wriply Marie Bennet, Raxtus Bracken, Scott Branson, Beth Bruch, Scott Chalupa, Yold Yolande Delius, aems dinunzio, Zaria El-Fil, emet ezell, Amalia Golomb-Leavitt, Che Gossett, Raven Hudson, Jonesy and Jaime Knight, Cassius Kelly, Sandra Y.L. Korn, Stasha Lampert, Toshio Meronek, Yasmin Nair, Mimi Thi Nguyen, E Ornelas, Darian Razdar, Bry Reed, Adrian Shanker, Kitty Stryker, Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore, Jamie Theophilos, and Rebecca Valeriano-Flores."

