Gulf News

Netanyahu and his sinister master plan

From killing the Oslo accord and weakening PNA to destabilis­ing the region, it has all been part of the Israeli prime minister’s grand design

- Special to Gulf News

or half of the past two decades, Benjamin “Bibi” Netanyahu has served as Prime Minister of Israel. Whatever his ultimate fate (given the ongoing criminal investigat­ions against him), it is clear that he has had a profound impact on Israel, Palestinia­ns, and the entire region.

There are those who have doubted that Netanyahu had any core beliefs, other than the desire to retain power. But even with his manoeuvrin­g and his penchant for prevaricat­ion, there are, in fact, core beliefs that have directed his career.

Shortly after his first election as prime minister, and before his maiden address to the United States Congress, a team of Ronald Reagan-era neo-conservati­ves (many of whom ended up in senior positions in the George W. Bush administra­tion) wrote a paper for Netanyahu to guide his remarks before Congress and to US audiences. The paper was called ‘A Clean Break’. The central themes of the paper were:

Ending the Oslo process and rejecting “land for peace” formula; reassertin­g Israel’s claim to the “land of Israel”; weakening the ability of the Palestinia­n National Authority (PNA) to govern; and poisoning the PNA’s image in the US to damage its standing,

Securing Israel’s northern border, by confrontin­g Iran, promoting internal conflict in Lebanon, and destabilis­ing Syria,

Strengthen­ing ties with US Republican­s, including proposing ending US economic aid in favour of military aid and buying into the Reagan-era idea of a “missile defence” system — a concept favoured by the GOP.

Confrontin­g Iraq and overthrowi­ng Saddam Hussain’s rule.

Over the past two decades, Netanyahu and his US allies, whether in or out of office, pursued these same objectives. To a great extent, they have succeeded. This unholy alliance between US neo-conservati­ves and Netanyahu was no accident. They had long been partners. Back in the late 1970s, Netanyahu convened many of these same thinkers to Israel for a summit at the Jonathan Institute — an event that some have called the birth of the American neo-conservati­ve movement. Back then, their focus was hostility to the Soviet Union and the “national liberation movements” that were alleged to be Soviet pawns. The ideology they spawned was decidedly pro-Israel and anti-Arab, and extremely hostile to all things Palestinia­n.

With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Oslo peace process, and the election of Bill Clinton as US president, the focus of both the neo-cons (as they were called) and Netanyahu shifted. Seeing US Republican­s as his allies in the effort to sabotage the peace process, Netanyahu’s Likud party set up a shop to provide talking points to GOP members of the Congress. Their goal was to make Republican­s partners in their fight against the Clinton administra­tion/Labour Party-endorsed peace process. With the GOP take-over of Congress in 1995, followed by Netanyahu’s election in 1996, the stage was set to kill the Oslo process. After his return to office in 2009, he was forced to endure eight years of a Democratic US administra­tion, led by Barack Obama. Once again, he turned to his relations with a Republican-led Congress to resist pressures to make peace.

‘Limited autonomy’

With the election of Donald Trump as US President, coupled with Republican control of Congress, Netanyahu feels more comfortabl­e now. His allies in Congress are vigorously pushing his agenda. There are bills designed to further punish and discredit the already weakened PNA; deny funding to United Nations Relief and Workers’ Agency for Palestine; outlaw the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement; and recognise, through clever sleight of hand language, Israel’s control over the Occupied Territorie­s. The Trump administra­tion, which began its tenure, proposing to deliver “a great deal” to end the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, has reportedly lowered its ambitions to a proposal mirroring a long-discredite­d 40-year-old Likud concept of “limited Palestinia­n autonomy”, denying Palestinia­ns full sovereignt­y and any right in occupied Jerusalem, while releasing large areas of the West Bank to Israeli expansion.

In reality, what Netanyahu has created is an unsustaina­ble mess that includes: A weakened and dependent PNA that was denied the ability to govern, causing it to lose legitimacy; a fractured Palestinia­n polity, with Hamas in control of a humanitari­an disaster in Gaza; an Iraq in a shambles and in its wake, an empowered and emboldened Iran and a metastasis­ed terrorist threat that now challenges many countries; and a hardened, though divided, Israeli electorate from which it is unlikely to see any new peace-oriented leadership emerging.

So this is the ‘House that Bibi built’. It is his legacy. While Israel proceeds along its merry way, each day building more colonies, demolishin­g more Palestinia­n homes, dishing out more hardships to an embittered captive people, it is a seething cauldron waiting for the next explosion.

Dr James J. Zogby is the president of Arab American Institute.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates