The Jews will never surrender their right to a country where their individual freedoms are protected. In addition, overseas Jews will dig deep to protect their families residing in Israel, so while Israel may suffer adverse results of the current global wave of antisemitism along with woke business decisions by companies disassociating themselves with Israel, Israel will simply reinvent its economy and prosper in the future.
Israel has a talented workforce comprised of both Jews, Christians and Arabs and capital will find a way to take advantage of those skills to produce products and services. Booming demand from developing countries will replace diminished demand from countries attempting to pressure Israel to respond in a way contrary to their national interests.
One measure of Israel's ability to evolve are its GDP numbers.
In 2022 Israel's GDP was estimated at $501.4 billion, in 2023 it was estimated at $564 billion, in 2024 it is estimated to grow by 1.5-1.6% down from 2.3% but still growing. Currently, it is expected to approach $600 billion by 2027. Lost demand for goods and services is being replaced by new demand.
In some respects, as countries force Israel to be less dependent on them, they will lose their ability to influence the outcome in the Middle East. That may not be in America's interest.
The future of Israel's relationship with the US will likely be influenced by the 2024 election. If Trump is elected in 2024, he will reverse course, since unlike Biden, who is at risk of alienating Israel as he already has the Saudis to secure the American Muslim vote, Trump sees the alliance between the Saudis and Israel critical in order to create an effective buffer against Iran's ambitions.
In the world of realpolitik, a strong Israel Arab alliance is the cheapest solution for the US to protect oil supplies and keep Iran occupied. Trump will be less focused on telling Israel what to do and more focused on Israel being a strong power in the Middle east to combat Iran.