The issue in Israel is not as clear cut as the US genocide of Native Americans. Jews and Arabs lived together in Palestine prior to 1947, albeit with lots of friction.
One root of the problem is that Israel was created as a country and Palestine was not. I've read that was because the Arabs rejected it, but I don't have independent corroboration of that, and I don't believe everything I read on the internet. It should have been a "both or neither" situation.
One other huge problem for Israel is that it is doomed to be an apartheid state. You cannot have a "democracy" AND no religious freedom. That is patently obvious to the most casual observer. The authoritative Arab states are examples of what Israel is becoming.
The biggest problem for Israel right now is demographics. The Palestinians, the Egyptians, the Syrians and the Lebanese are growing in population faster than Israel. Israel's adversaries in the Six-day-war are now an order of magnitude larger than they were. Israel's growth is tiny in comparison.
From 1948 onwards, Israel had no interest in Palestine becoming its own formal nation. Instead Israel concentrated on ethnically cleansing the land of Palestinians (they were doing it decades before 1948 as well).
I'm sure Zelenskyy wishes he could go back in time and take the April 2022 deal with Russia. I wonder if by 2028 Israel will be wishing it could have the deal with the 1967 or 1948 borders.
The Arab world is not the weak and friendless collection of tribes/countries it was 50, 70 or 90 years ago.
US imperialists are still bogged down in Ukraine, and trying to get a war going in Taiwan. As big and powerful as the US military is, supporting three major conflicts is far beyond its capacity to fight, let alone provide weapons and ammo for.