Fires, Foreign Capital & the Isaac Accords Reshape Argentina’s Last Frontier
The story of Patagonia in 2026 is far from concluded. Fires may burn out, but the debates they ignite, about land, water, governance, and foreign influence, will shape the region for decades.
Freddie Ponton
21st Century Wire
The fires started quietly. In early January 2026, a plume of smoke rose over the lenga forests and glacial valleys of Argentine Patagonia. By the time the blazes were fully visible from the air, thousands of hectares had been scorched, rural communities were under threat, and officials acknowledged that some of the fires were deliberate, with accelerants and military-grade devices recovered. Firefighters, aided by aerial units and the army, battled against fierce winds and a landscape already stressed by drought. But these fires were more than an environmental crisis. In towns from Bariloche to Lago Escondido, whispers circulated that foreign actors, including known Zionists. might be exploiting the chaos. Indigenous Mapuche communities and local activists began raising concerns about Israeli nationals, sometimes identified as Israeli soldiers, moving into remote lands, their presence coinciding with government reforms easing foreign ownership of burned and rural properties.
What once circulated as a rumour has now become an unavoidable reality on the ground. Across Patagonia — on both the Argentine and Chilean sides, unease is growing as residents and visitors alike confront an increasingly visible and unexplained presence of Israeli nationals, many presenting themselves as ordinary backpackers. Their numbers are not seasonal anomalies but a constant: thousands arrive every year, in every season. In towns like El Calafate or Bariloche, which was a refugee city for Nazis after World War II, the signs are impossible to ignore; Hebrew lettering dominates shop windows, hostels, and travel agencies, creating the uncanny impression of a parallel cultural footprint embedded deep in the Patagonian frontier.
Locals are no longer asking whether something is happening, but why. What explains this sustained presence in one of South America’s most strategic and resource-rich regions? Why now, and why here? As criminal fires devastate vast stretches of land and Argentina’s political leadership deepens its alignment with Israel under the Isaac Accord, the official explanations grow thinner, not clearer. Is Patagonia quietly being repurposed into a geopolitical backyard? Is Argentina becoming a testing ground, or a playground, for foreign strategic interests?
These questions, once dismissed as fringe speculation, are increasingly difficult to ignore. And the deeper one looks, the more the story resists simple answers.
Milei’s Blind Alignment and the Isaac Accords
The Isaac Accords represent the latest evolution of the Abraham Accords, aiming to expand Israel’s relationships throughout the Middle East without necessitating that Israel honour Palestinian rights. Named after Abraham’s biblical son, the Isaac Accords strive for a similar normalisation in Latin America. Argentina’s president, Milei, launched these accords in collaboration with the Genesis Prize Foundation, following the foundation’s presentation of the ‘Jewish Nobel Prize’, also referred to as the Genesis Prize, to Milei in the Israeli parliament in June 2025.
The narrative of foreign influence in Patagonia is entwined with Argentina’s political pivot under President Javier Milei. His administration has fostered close ties with Israel, aligning with its global strategy of influence consolidation by launching the Isaac Accords in November 2025. Embassy relocations, defense cooperation, and engagement with Israeli-linked financiers like Eduardo Elsztain and Joe Lewis have positioned Argentina as a key southern hemisphere ally.
SEE MORE: The Rise of the Isaac Accords: How Israel is Redrawing South America’s Political Landscape
To observers, these developments hint at more than standard diplomacy. In 2025, photographs of Milei and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reviewing maps of Patagonia caused a stir. Critics argued that the imagery symbolised a strategic interest in the region’s resources, its proximity to Antarctica, and its under-governed expanses. Agreements emerging from these meetings included intelligence cooperation, military training, and economic investment programs — moves that have sparked intense debate about sovereignty, resource control, and long-term strategic planning.
IMAGE: An image of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu examining a map of Argentine and Chilean Patagonia sparked geopolitical alerts after he met with President Javier Milei in Jerusalem in June 2025, and who came to sign military and immigration agreements with Israel (Source: Movimiento Alternativa)
Land, Water, and the Quiet Colonisation
Compounding these concerns are reports that Israeli media have openly advertised land for sale in southern Argentina and Chile, often highlighting its strategic value and proximity to Antarctica. The timing coincides with Milei’s policies easing foreign acquisition of land, raising questions about the confluence of policy, market opportunity, and foreign strategy. One of the most concerning results of this agenda was the Argentine president’s repeal of the law that barred foreigners from purchasing land in border regions, which ultimately paved the way for Zionist millionaires to acquire land in Argentine Patagonia, which shares direct borders with Chile. This represents a coordinated, quiet yet perilous initiative that has even been highlighted in Israeli media, where land in Patagonia is being marketed at absurdly low prices, some critics remark. This draws some uncomfotable parallel to Ukraine and the lifting of restrictions on farmland purchases by foreigners under conditions set by Zelensky himself, which ultimately opened the door to foreign vulture capitalists, including the likes of Blackrock.
Meanwhile, locals have reported sightings of Israeli soldiers or veterans in Patagonia. While there is no confirmation of formal military deployment, journalists and residents describe mapping, monitoring, and activities consistent with military training or intelligence observation. Some analyses suggest these presences could be tied to interest in Antarctic access, strategic southern corridors, and mineral-rich zones.
Land and water have emerged as key instruments of influence. Billionaires like Joe Lewis and Eduardo Elsztain control massive swaths of land in Patagonia, with private security and restrictions on access that amount to a quasi-sovereign parallel state. Simultaneously, Israel’s national water company Mekorot has signed agreements to manage rivers and infrastructure in southern provinces. Critics warn that Mekorot’s methods in Israel, accused of water apartheid, could displace Indigenous communities and restrict access to essential resources, a concern particularly acute for the Mapuche. Unevitably, the control over a resource as precious as water serves as a reminder of how the Israeli military forces achieved considerable control over the Al-Mantara Dam in the Quneitra countryside of Syria, a crucial water resource in the region, which could have significant repercussions for both Syria’s indigenous population and its neighbouring country, Jordan. Israelis are famously known for using water as a weapon.
Mekorot operates by implementing projects in regions characterised by extractive industries, limited water access, and ongoing privatisation efforts. Numerous international organisations and local collectives have documented the company’s activities in areas where the Israeli firm has broadened its reach. In Argentina, opposition to Israeli water control is intensifying, with initiatives like the Fuera Mekorot Campaign spearheading the resistance. This movement gained momentum after Argentine Interior Minister Wado de Pedro visited Israel in 2022, where she was joined by governors and representatives from ten Argentine provinces. During this visit, they participated in discussions aimed at enhancing productivity through water projects and effective water management. Ultimately, the movement succeeded in securing six out of the twelve agreements that Mekorot signed. You can read more here to find out what they’ve discovered.
IMAGE: Protester Silvia Ferreyra is part of a backlash to the Israeli national water company Mekorot and its work in Argentina [Victor Swezey/Al Jazeera]
The fires intersect disturbingly with these land and water developments. Burned areas become ripe for acquisition, and the legal reforms that followed the blazes have lowered barriers for foreign investors. While some argue this is part of economic recovery and modernisation, the optics suggest a systemic advantage for foreign actors, raising concerns that Patagonia is being quietly absorbed into a network of influence spanning diplomacy, private capital, and infrastructure control.
Patagonia Under Pressure: Fires, Foreign Influence, and Indigenous Marginalisation
The wildfires that have ravaged Patagonia in recent months are only one layer of a far more complex and troubling story. Beyond the flames, a growing number of reports which requires furhter checking detail the visible presence of Israeli nationals in the region, often travelling under the guise of tourists or backpackers. In towns like El Calafate, Hebrew signage is now commonplace in shops and hostels, drawing attention from locals and visitors alike and raising questions about the scale and purpose of this ongoing presence. Mapuche communities have begun to speak out publicly, describing behaviours they perceive as aggressive or hostile. Moira Millán, a prominent Mapuche leader, observed that “where they are, they generate riots… a rather hostile way of handling,” while Marta, from the Community of Los Toldos, warned Argentines to “open their eyes, they are not going to leave anyone here with terror.” Millán framed these developments as contributing to the formation of “a kind of postmodern feudal states” in Patagonia, hinting at both the colonial undertones and strategic stakes of foreign influence in the region.
IMAGE: Since the 1990s, Moira Millán has campaigned for the rights of the Mapuche people, who have more than three million members in Chile and Argentina. (Source: Mariana Eliano)
This foreign presence intersects with domestic politics in dangerous ways. Under the Milei administration, the Ancestral Mapuche Resistance (Resistencia Ancestral Mapuche, RAM) was officially designated a “terrorist organisation” in 2025. Critics argue this move is highly suspicious, functioning as a smokescreen that demonises Indigenous communities while diverting attention from the real drivers of environmental and territorial exploitation, including criminal wildfires, land acquisitions, and foreign interests in water and other natural resources. By branding Patagonia’s Indigenous inhabitants as a threat, Milei’s government effectively reshapes the narrative around local unrest, obscuring the region’s true vulnerabilities and the complex interplay of external actors, corporate interests, and geopolitical alignments.
The broader geopolitical dimension cannot be ignored. Milei’s uncritical embrace of Israel and the Isaac Accords, coupled with a creeping influence over critical infrastructure and natural resources, intensifies Argentine concerns. The administration has encouraged the involvement of Israeli companies in water management through initiatives like Mekorot, whose approach to water rights in Israel has drawn international criticism for promoting exclusionary access policies, raising fears of a similar dynamic in Patagonia. Alongside the growing presence of foreign nationals and private companies, the region’s forests, rivers, and lands are increasingly exposed to both environmental and political vulnerabilities, with Indigenous populations bearing the brunt of regulatory and security decisions while questions about sovereignty, resource control, and foreign influence multiply.
SEE MORE: Weaponising Water: Israel Assumes Control Over The Al-Mantara Dam In Syria
Plan Andinia? Truth or Modern Fears
IMAGE: Map of Argentine Patagonia with the flag of Israel in the so-called Andinia project. (Special Ideogram | EJ Central)
Historical currents and long-buried anxieties run deep beneath the contemporary debate over Patagonia, nowhere more visibly than in the recurring invocation of Plan Andinia, a narrative, part historical footnote (Herzl 1896 pamphlet Der Judenstaat), part geopolitical myth, suggesting that Israel or Zionist interests might one day seek to establish a second state in the Patagonian hinterland.
IMAGE: Extract from Theodor Herzl’s pamphlet “A Jewish State,” first published in April 1896 (Source: US Archive)
While no direct evidence exists that any formal strategy to colonize Patagonia was ever adopted by Israeli governments, the convergence of this historical narrative with the surge in Israel’s military presence, repeated criminal fires, and the creeping control over vital water resources through foreign partnerships like Mekorot, combined with President Milei’s uncritical fascination with Israel and his zealous embrace of the Isaac Accords, gives it a frightening immediacy for Argentines today. For residents, Indigenous communities, and local activists, Patagonia is no longer just a distant or abstract frontier; it has become a space where historical anxieties, environmental destruction, and foreign-aligned policy decisions collide, leaving them to wonder whether the government is safeguarding sovereignty or quietly enabling outside influence over one of Argentina’s most strategic and fragile regions.
The Human Cost and the Question of Sovereignty
Local voices underscore the human cost of this emerging frontier. Mapuche communities report encroachments on ancestral lands, and environmentalists warn of ecological collapse if fires and uncontrolled development continue. Citizens describe a sense of abandonment, noting that while foreign investment is courted, local needs remain unaddressed.
It is crucial to distinguish verified fact from a circulating allegation. Claims linking fires to specific foreign operatives from Israel remain to be confirmed by official investigations. However, it is not unreasonable to assume that the Milei administration will do its utmost to keep any inconvenient truth out of the columns. Yet even when unproven, these narratives reflect the anxiety and suspicion of a region at the intersection of environmental disaster, political alignment, and global strategy.
Patagonia, once perceived as a remote wilderness, is now a laboratory of modern geopolitical intrigue, where fires, foreign investment, military presence, and resource control intersect. Whether these developments are coincidental, opportunistic, or strategically coordinated, the outcome is a region whose sovereignty, ecology, and cultural heritage are under unprecedented pressure.
The story of Patagonia in 2026 is far from concluded. Fires may burn out, but the debates they ignite, about land, water, governance, and foreign influence, will shape the region for decades. As Argentina opens its doors to foreign capital and deepens alliances with distant powers such as Israel, the last frontier becomes a proving ground for global strategy, land grab, natural resource plundering, local resistance, and the limits of state control.
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