The Jerusalem Post

Blue and White not expecting breakthrou­gh with Liberman

Liberman accuses PM of ‘begging Egypt to help us surrender’ • Sa’ar: Enemies don’t see difference among Israelis

- • By GIL HOFFMAN and LAHAV HARKOV

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz will meet with Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman at Ramat Gan’s Kfar Hamaccabia­h Hotel on Thursday morning, amid low expectatio­ns for a political breakthrou­gh on the formation of a national unity government by next Wednesday, when Gantz’s mandate ends.

“There won’t be a big announceme­nt in the meeting,” a source in Blue and White said. “But a week is still a long time in Israeli politics. It’s like a year in other countries.”

After it initially appeared that the security tensions could bring Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Gantz closer together, Gantz downplayed those expectatio­ns on Wednesday on a visit to Sderot, where he said that the security events and political situation should not be conflated.

“If there is a way to promote unity in the State of Israel, I will be the first to do so,” Gantz stated. “I call for unity at every opportunit­y and I am making every effort toward forming a unity government, but there are a lot of important things in the State of Israel: there are principles and values, there is the law and there are democratic aspects. Unity should serve all national interests and not just one challengin­g situation.”

The four leaders in Blue and White’s so-called “cockpit” continued to disagree over the possibilit­y of a unity government in which Netanyahu would go first. While Gantz is open to the idea and Gabi Ashkenazi has warmed up to it, Moshe Ya’alon would refuse to be a minister in such a government and Yair Lapid still rules it out completely.

In a meeting on Wednesday, the four MKs decided not to rule out the possibilit­y of a minority left-wing coalition supported from outside by the Joint List, who a Likud spokesman called “terrorist supporters.” The Likud lamented that Liberman nor Gantz have yet to explicitly rule out forming a minority government.

“This kind of government endangers the State of Israel and is a slap in the face to IDF soldiers who [Joint List MKs] Ayman Odeh and Ahmed Tibi want to put on trial as war criminals. We cannot let a dangerous minority government exist for even one day,” the spokesman said.

In an interview on Channel 12, Liberman was repeatedly asked about such a possibilit­y and he said the question was not relevant. The channel reported that in a meeting with President Reuven

Rivlin on Wednesday, Liberman said he was ready to be a guarantor that if a unity government is formed with Netanyahu going first, that Netanyahu would quit the post and let Gantz take over.

Liberman sought clarificat­ion from Rivlin on the president’s proposal for ending the coalition-building crisis in the meeting at the President’s Residence.

According to the compromise – which Likud supports openly and Blue and White has purposely refrained from openly endorsing yet – Netanyahu would be prime minister first and then take an extended break while continuing to fight corruption charges. According to the plan, Gantz would take Netanyahu’s place as prime minister when Netanyahu is incapacita­ted, after initially serving as vice prime minister.

Liberman asked Rivlin how to handle the complicate­d question of what constitute­s being incapacita­ted. Blue and White has hesitated to endorse the compromise, due in part to that question remaining unresolved. Rivlin said he would be happy to clarify the proposal for Gantz and Netanyahu. Likud negotiator Ze’ev Elkin and Yisrael Beytenu Oded Forrer were spotted eating together at the Knesset cafeteria and holding unofficial negotiatio­ns.

Liberman blasted Prime Minister Benjamin

Netanyahu on Facebook on Wednesday for his handling of the Gaza crisis. The Yisrael Beytenu leader said the only one who had a solution to the rocket fire was himself.

“Instead of finding a real solution, Netanyahu and his Likud colleagues are slinging mud all day,” Liberman wrote. “They have no answers or solution, and they are not ready to conduct profession­al deliberati­ons on the security situation. Even worse, we have found ourselves begging Egypt to help us surrender and end the incident as it was before, which will just lead to yet another round.”

Likud MK Gideon Sa’ar told the Israel Britain and Commonweal­th Associatio­n’s Balfour Dinner that Israel must break apart the terrorist infrastruc­ture in Gaza, and that if Israel does not, Hamas and Islamic Jihad will upgrade their abilities, like Hezbollah.

“There could be a situation in Gaza that is like Lebanon that will make Israel’s strategic situation even more challengin­g,” Sa’ar said.

Sa’ar said Israel’s enemies do not see a difference among Israelis and that is why Israel needs a broad unity government.

Greer Fay Cashman contribute­d to this report.

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