Gulf News

An embattled Israeli leadership

Netanyahu needs any victory, however illusive, to buy time and the allegiance of his camp of extremists, especially since he is being investigat­ed for fraud with a good chance of being indicted

- Special to Gulf News

iplomatic niceties aside, the much-anticipate­d visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Washington was a political fiasco. US President Donald Trump, despite clearly attempting to act ‘presidenti­al’, appeared confused, ignorant and at times meek, yet hardly gave Netanyahu what he was seeking.

The Trump-Netanyahu White House press conference on February 15 was rife with “contradict­ions, political sloganeeri­ng and more than a few disagreeme­nts that were elegantly shoved aside,” wrote Barack Ravid in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

However, despite Netanyahu attempting to conduct himself with his usual pompous confidence, he is an embattled leader. He is being investigat­ed by police for three criminal offences, including bribery and corruption. One of the charges, ‘File 3000’, is by far the most serious for it involves cronyism with a staggering price tag measured in millions of dollars.

Netanyahu is trapped, trying to appease his government coalition of right-wing and ultra-nationalis­t zealots to prevent a coup by Naftali Bennett, the colonist ideologue, extremist Education Minister and head of the Jewish Home Party. In the process, he is taking his country to the edge of a precipice.

Israel’s far-right are more emboldened than ever, no longer requiring Netanyahu’s help and popularity among the right — popularity that is dwindling anyway. They do not want to talk about states, peace deals, compromise­s or slowing down and curbing the constructi­on of illegal colonies. They feel they have the political capital, funds and military power to do as they please.

Netanyahu has sustained his career at the helm of Israeli politics for many years through a clever balancing act, teetering between empty words and sinister deeds. He is a master at weathering Israel’s destructiv­e political storms. However, his luck is likely to run out soon, with the right having grown more extreme and his corruption scandals not being shoved under the rug anymore. His visit to the White House was thus intended to win him some desperatel­y needed political capital. But can Trump — known for his verbal contradict­ions — be a reliable ally?

Words with no substance

The US President can hardly be taken seriously. He says much and does little. His words, often offensive, carry no substance, and it is nearly impossible to summarise his political outlook about important issues, since he has none.

Donald Trump is not merely a raving man, but quite a dangerous one as well. His unpredicta­bility must also be worrying for Israel which expects from its American benefactor­s complete clarity and consistenc­y in terms of its political support. At 70 years old, Trump is simply incapable of being the stalwart, pro-Zionist ideologue in a way that suits Israeli interests well. A case in point is the White House press conference on the day of Netanyahu’s visit.

The trip was scheduled immediatel­y after Trump’s inaugurati­on on January 20, and is considered the Trump Presidency’s answer to what Israel incorrectl­y perceived as a hostile US administra­tion under former president Barack Obama.

Obama had granted Israel $38 billion (Dh139.57 billion) over the course of ten years, estimated to be the most generous aid package in US history. He also supported all Israeli wars against Palestinia­ns throughout his presidency, and unfailingl­y defended Israel before the internatio­nal community.

But Israel expects blind support. Trump is striving to be that very messiah that Israel’s army of right-wing extremists have been calling and praying for. But the man cannot help it, no matter how hard he tries.

“Looking at two-state or one-state, I like the one that both parties like. I’m very happy with the one both parties like. I can live with either one,” Trump said in an answer to a journalist’s question. It was his way of telling Israel that the US will no longer impose solutions, as he pushed the ‘one-state solution’ idea to the very top of the discussion. This is not at all what Israel wanted or expected.

Trump spoke of a peace deal that will include other countries in the region and ‘surprise’ everyone. Netanyahu cares little for such rhetoric. He wants to carry on with his fearmonger­ing of ‘radical Islam’, nuclear Iran, and juxtapose ‘democratic Israel’ with ‘non-democratic Arabs’. He wants to preserve a state of war, create the needed distractio­ns for more land grabbing and continue flaunting internatio­nal law. He is hardly concerned with solutions — be it a two-state or a one democratic state idea.

Netanyahu must feel triumphant because of Trump’s assuring words. The Israeli leader needs any victory, however illusive to buy time and the allegiance of his camp of extremists, especially since he is being investigat­ed for fraud with a good chance of being indicted.

He might even initiate a war against Gaza to create further distractio­n, and will not hesitate to conjure up ‘alternativ­e facts’, presenting his country as a victim, to test American support and ‘downgrade’ Hamas’ and other Palestinia­n groups’ defences.

However, none of this will change the reality that Netanyahu had himself unwisely constructe­d. Israel has laid out its vision, and it is a dark one. Palestinia­ns must present the antithesis to that destructiv­e vision — a road map towards justice, equality and peace for all.

Dr Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an internatio­nally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books and the founder of PalestineC­hronicle.com. His books include Searching Jenin, The Second Palestinia­n Intifada and his latest My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story. His website is www.ramzybarou­d.net.

 ?? Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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