Posted: 08 May 2012 08:30 PM PDT
Thirteen years after
he was sent packing by Bill Clinton's political consultants and a phony third
party, Bibi Netanyahu has become a political survivor. The awkward politician
constantly under siege by the media and at the mercy of domestic political squabbling,
has become a veteran of Israel's turbulent politics.
Netanyahu owes most of
his success to a dysfunctional political climate. in which there is no one
left to replace him. The old generation of leaders is gone and even a
notoriously fickle Israeli electorate would not trust most of his rivals to
make them dinner, let alone run a country. Displaced by Sharon, he learned
the game of coalitions from him and has ably exploited the rivalries and
petty careerism of the Knesset lineup to stay in office. With Barak by his
side and Peres shaking hands with foreign dignitaries, the transformation is
almost complete.
Netanyahu's electability allows him to exploit the less electable, flipping
through ministers and coalition partners like a game of cards. A deeply
divided and thoroughly corrupt Knesset has no shortage of partners willing to
dance with him for a ministry and the perks of power. With no one positioned
to take down Netanyahu, his is the only game in town and everyone knows it.
Before Sharon, two conservative Israeli Prime Ministers were forced out by
American pressure over the peace process. One of those men was Netanyahu.
Since Begin met Carter, there has never been a relationship as bad as the one
between Netanyahu and Obama. If Clinton wanted Netanyahu gone, Obama wants
him gone on a rail. And that makes Netanyahu's position dangerously
precarious because in any election or coalition deal, Washington D.C. is the
shadow player.
But Livni's appeals to Obama suggesting that she would make all the deals
that Netanyahu would not, did not help. Instead she was shouldered aside by
Shaul Mofaz who has brought Kadima, with its sizable Knesset presence, into
the coalition with Netanyahu. There is little doubt that Mofaz, like anyone
who jumped ship for the trumped up Kadima Party, would sell out the country
and his own mother at a signal from Obama.
This brand of insanity makes Israeli politics a high-wire act where there is
no stability and no future, and Bibi has learned to walk the tightrope.
Whether he has learned to enjoy it is another story.
Outsiders may imagine that Israeli politics involves long discussions about
terrorism, and depending on their political views, extended sessions on how
to make Palestinian Arab children cry or how to win a stunning victory over
terror. Neither is really true. Like most countries, Israeli politics are
domestic. They involve things that hardly anyone on the outside cares about,
even when poison pen correspondents like Karl Vick and Jodi Rudoren try to
explain to Time Magazine and New York Times readers how this
development once again reaffirms Israel's status as the liberal devil.
Israeli politics, like everyone's politics, is mainly about dividing the
government pie among all the interest groups who want a piece; it is about
politicians advocating programs that won't pass in order to score points with
a constituency; and it is about interest groups denouncing each other for
taking too much of the pie and using it the wrong way. And, most of all, it's
about people who have few skills and many contacts, who have managed to get
themselves into the Knesset and will make any deal and do any dirty deed to
stay there.
If a preemptive strike
on Iran's nuclear program does take place, it will have very little to do
with the politics of the moment, which focuses on such glamorous issues as
political access, government money, the draft and deciding whom to blame for
the destruction of the country. It will happen just as quietly and quickly as
the coalition deal with Kadima did. A stealth attack in a loud political
process.
Unlike the American and European left which oppose an Israeli strike on the
Iranian nuclear program because they oppose Israel's continued existence, the
majority of the Israeli political establishment knows that Iran's nuclear
program needs to be stopped. What they are opposed to is Netanyahu getting
the credit for stopping it. Bringing Mofaz into the tent will allow him to
share in the credit, but will redouble the opposition from outside the
coalition and from rivals inside it as well.
It will also give Netanyahu a little breathing room in the latest round of
the secular-religious conflict by bringing in a partner which cannot afford
to alienate either side if it wants to one day run the country, while making
his government less dependent on the quarreling parties. It's a formula for
gridlock on a partisan issue that has no possible resolution anyway.
But all that leaves one question unanswered. What is Netanyahu really
planning to do? To Americans he may seem like a natural leader, but to the
Israeli right, he's Mitt Romney, a smooth-talker with few principles and many
concessions. And yet Netanyahu is not an empty vessel filled with careerism
and corruption, like Ehud Olmert or Shaul Mofaz. There is the appearance of a
decent man inside all the politics, but his policies for the most part have
been defined by the politics.
The Bibi who allowed himself to be bullied by Clinton at Wye appeared to
stand up to Obama in D.C., but policy-wise, he does not seem to have
fundamentally changed from that man. American foreign policy hands are
banking on Netanyahu playing the "Nixon goes to China" role and
making the concessions on Jerusalem that no left-wing politician would. And
that is an impression that he needs to cultivate to keep from being forced
out of office. But what is the truth behind all the games?
That's a question which unfortunately cannot be answered. Admiring
Netanyahu's political maneuvers is a dangerous game. His predecessor in the
Likud Party, who played it better than he did, was a war hero and
tough-talker from the right who proved to be one of the worst disasters after
the other war hero and tough-talker from the left. Sharon and Rabin rammed
through disastrous policies at the expense of the country. It would not
be unprecedented for Netanyahu to do the same thing.
Netanyahu is a different breed of political animal. His only policy in two governments
has been the waiting game. Last time around he was forced out before the
waiting game expired. It's an open question of whether this time the waiting
game is leading up to something or whether he's still playing just to stay in
the game.
In a different country, Netanyahu would be admired as the man who led Israel
through economic turmoil and privatization to prosperity. But Israel's most
pressing problems are not economic and thanks to Rabin and Peres, it does not
have the leisure to turn itself into Hong Kong or Singapore at its own pace.
The conservative politician of the current period is above all
else a good manager. Not glamorous, even a touch dorky, but good with numbers
and reminds the electorate of their uncle or nephew. He may be fairly
liberal, but he gives the impression of being solid and reliable. Perhaps not
fully trustworthy, but competent at whatever it is he does.
Netanyahu was ahead of the curve, ahead of Prime Minister Cameron in the UK
or Mitt Romney in the US, as the template for this type of politician.It's no
wonder that Netanyahu gets along well with Romney, they are somewhat similar,
the pragmatic sons of strong-willed fathers trying to find their own place in
the world. They are instinctively moderate and good managers; but lacking in
passion.
In a conflict they take the path of least resistance. In Israel the path of
least resistance means bowing to international pressure, making more
concessions, handing over Jerusalem and ignoring Iran. If Netanyahu does
this, then he will likely seal Israel's fate and will become one of the last
prime ministers of the State of Israel.
Netanyahu's political maneuverings show that he is a political survivor, the
great unknown is whether his principles have also survived. And whether
Israel will survive him.
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