Wednesday, February 18, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News







Israel's Political Malaise Reaches the Terminal Stage


Posted: 17 Feb 2009 06:33 PM PST




It's been a week since Israel went to the polls, and there
still is no government.

Instead there are a motley collection of parties, alliances and leaders--
all jockeying for their place in line in a hypothetical government that
may be formed.

First in line we have Livni, clueless and inexperienced, whose only asset
was that she was and wasn't actually the Prime Minister, allowing her to
maintain plausible
deniality for the corruption and incompetence of her
government.

Kadima, her party, had been formed by Sharon as a way to destroy
Israel's two governing parties, Labor and Likud, replacing them with a one
man state. When
Sharon's aging body finally gave out, his closest sidekick
Ehud Olmert, replaced him and kept the kleptocracy going. When Olmert
seemed set to finally begin paying for his crimes, his own sidekick, Livni took
his place for the electorate's sake.

And somehow in the process dragged Kadima to a legislative victory.

Considering that Kadima was little more than a crime ring composed of
former Likud and Labor Knesset members which illegally seized the Prime
Minister's chair, with the collusion
of the attorney general. Considering that
Kadima's Prime Minister was under indictment, and his predecessor only
escaped that same fate by way of a coma. Considering that Kadima's major
triumph, the forcibly ethnic cleansing of the Jewish residents of Gaza
paved the way for the creation of a Hamas state and the shelling of
Ashkelon.

Considering that Kadima had presided over three failed military
campaigns, two
against Hamas, one against Hezbollah without actually
rescuing a single Israeli POW...



...Kadima's victory was proof of one of three things.
Divine intervention. Massive voter fraud. Or the willingness of the average
Israeli to be convinced that voting for a "Centrist" party was the right thing
to do because the media told him so. The overall results however suggested a
fourth course. While many in the conservative camp were rejoicing over the
loss of seats by left wing parties, it's safe to say that what the likes of Meretz
lost, Kadima gained, because Kadima has demonstrated that it can actually
fulfill the goals that Meretz MK's can only impotently rant about.

When Livni announced that Israel would have to give up half its
land, she made it
quite clear that the old left had made way for a more
practical left.

Livni, like much of Kadima's Ex-Likudniks including Olmert
himself, ably demonstrated the
fallacy of nepotism within the
ranks of the Likud. Among that second generation of the sons
and daughters of Herut stalwarts, Netanyahu is the best of a bad lot.
And that isn't saying a lot.

It is an ironic piece of Israeli history that Sharon, once a
member of a thuggish left wing
movement that beat Jewish Zionist
youth, managed to worm his way high up into the Likud, and
proceeded to destroy Begin's Prime Ministership, while handing
Israel its first true military disaster in Lebanon-- resurrected his
political career to do it a second time by delivering a near fatal blow to
the Likud, and surrendering Gaza to Hamas.

With Kadima, Sharon's hubris gave way to boundless corruption.
Now Kadima isn't quite dead, but despite winning a victory, its hopes of
actually being a ruling party are low.

Livni faces the choice between a unity government with Netanyahu,
playing second fiddle to him, or trying to hold a place in the opposition,
despite not having any real
ideology, besides cowardly expediency.

Second in line, we have Bibi Netanyahu and the Likud. It's still up
in the air whether Netantyahu really won or lost the election. There are few
people inside Israel who are
particularly enthusiastic about Netanyahu, and
while much of that is the work of a media hate campaign, plenty of it can be
laid at Netanyahu's own door. In the election people didn't so much vote Likud,
as vote not-Kadima and not-Labor.

Netanyahu has some credibility as an economic reformer, but
it's a bad time for
a free marketer to run for office, and on defense,
Netanyahu doesn't walk the walk, or even talk the talk.

Post-election Netanyahu has worked hard to remind people of why they
had to grit their teeth to vote for him in the first place. The election
results left the Likud in the
best position to form a new government, an
advantage Netanyahu has worked hard to squander in the seven days
since then. Time and time again, Netanyahy has managed to project the
opposite of decisive, and is currently playing the same political games that
undermined the Likud in the first place.

With Lieberman's Yisrael Beiteinu emerging as the decisive
player in any likely
coalition, Netanyahu has instead been edging
toward a unity government with Kadima. It is unclear if this is a manuever
to bargainLieberman down to a more reasonable set of demands, or
whether Netanyahu really is prepared to get in bed with Kadima.
Considering that Kadima was created by robbing the Likud ranks blind,
and that any financial reforms are impossible with Kadima in a unity
government, the whole thing becomes an absurd charade.

Meanwhile the religious parties offer a supercoalition of
religious parties as a
third alternative. Of course this coalition is likely
to last almost as long as an Israeli cabbie's patience. When even the
Haredi parties couldn't work together long enough to win the Jerusalem
Mayorality, the idea of such an alliance lasting past the first budget
debate is equally absurd. The only advantage is that the
Haredi parties are far simpler to deal with than Lieberman.
They just want money.


Lieberman wants money and power.

The choices aren't easy, and Netanyahu has a poor history of being able to
make them.


Netanyahu must cobble together a coalition that will survive
through some turbulent
times and tough decisions. Keeping your enemies
close is one dictum of Israeli politics, and between Lieberman and Livni,
he has a lot of enemies to choose from.

Time and time again Netanyahu has demonstrated that he can win
Likud primaries. He's had a much poorer track record at winning national
elections. Even if Netanyahu winds up become Prime Minister, he's made a
weak start that reinforces all the negative stereotypes Israelis already
hold about him.

But that's just the beginning.

Israel is now more isolated than ever, and the old American alliance has
turned dark and poisonous with Obama's ascension. Iran is accelerating its
drive to destroy Israel, arming
Hamas and Hizbullah with ever more
sophisticated weapons for a proxy war, while racing to build and deploy its
own nuclear weapons.


Any Prime Minister will have to resist a great deal of pressure,
as well as tackling domestic economic problems. He will also have to
deal with the Lebanon and Gaza problems, as well as Iran, and resist
pressure to concede the Golan Heights to Syria, and recognize and
negotiate with Hamas.

Not since 1948 or 1967 has Israel faced a collection of threats of this magnitude.
And never has the leadership quotient been lacking as badly.
The real threat to Israel however comes from the apathy of the
general public.

The average Israeli remains unconvinced, despite everything,
that anything bad
will really happen. Going back to 1992 if you made even
fairly conservative predictions to the average Israeli about the expansion of
terrorism based on
policies of concession, he was likely to dimiss it out of
hand.

Not much has changed. That same man on the street will concede that the
government may be negotiating to hand over Jerusalem, but will
dismiss that
too with a wave of his hand, saying that it will never happen.
In that same way
he has dismissed the prospect of Gaza shelling, Arafat's
militas going on terrorist
rampages, and Israel being cut in half. Call it a
coping strategy for the shell shocked, but it is the soul of Israeli politics.

Excluding the committed right and the committed left, the average Israeli is
both
dissatisfied and complacent. General disgust merges with apathy,
sometimes giving way to a brief bout of cheerleading one party or another.
This swing vote has made Israeli politics a particularly dizzying and
incoherent indoor sport.

The man on the street does not understand or care much for the
ideologies of the right and the left. He likes the center because it seems
safe, and is always open to the lure of third parties because he doesn't
trust the enstablishment parties. Of course the succesful
third parties such as Kadima are themselves products of the
enstablishment, but by the
time he figures that out, the damage has
usually been done.

Meanwhile Israel's party centered, rather than region centered
political system, insures that single issue voters will have a field day,
and that the political system will have to deal with the fallout. In a
system where anyone can start a party, and where parties
routinely disintegrate into two or three parties, the potential
for chaos, mischief and
disillusionment is virtually endless.


But the real legacy of the 2009 election, whatever its outcome
may be,
is that the same political personalities who have been plaguing
Israeli politics all these years, have learned nothing, and are too
busy pushing and
shoving each other to do anything productive. Everyone
from the great to the small, has demonstrated a horrifying willingness to put
their own personal
ambitions ahead of country and ideals. The disgusting
political bickering and manuevering that preceded the election has given way
to the disgusting political bickering and manuevering on display in the week
since the election. And the bottom line is that very little has changed.

The Israeli public may have voted more to the right, but their votes
appear to have hardly made a difference. Instead of an election what we
got was a circus,
complete with betrayals and double dealing worthy of a
dozen soap operas, and lists filled with the same smirking politicians we were
sick of 15 years ago,
augmented by models, celebrities, self-proclaimed
activists, and random Russian immigrants that every party running hoped
would be enough to sway the Russian vote.

While Kadima and the Likud both celebrate their victories, Hamas' shells
burn on Israeli soil, and neither party has any serious plan for
dealing with that. And so
while the 2009 election may not doom Israel, but
it won't save it either. Nothing short of a revolution may do that.












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