The Daily Telegraph

Netanyahu denies putting power first, but his actions say otherwise

- By Paul Nuki GLOBAL HEALTH SECURITY EDITOR

THERE is a psychologi­cal profile of Benjamin Netanyahu in the academic archives that remains apposite to his behaviour today.

“Personal success is more important to him than ideology and he constantly strives for it,” concluded behavioura­l scientists from Tel Aviv University during his first term in office in the late 1990s.

He had “difficulty appreciati­ng perspectiv­es other than his own” and difficulty distinguis­hing between the “personal and public” realms, they added.

To many outside Israel, Mr Netanyahu’s behaviour over the last few days will have seemed extraordin­ary, and deserving of psychologi­cal examinatio­n.

With a deal on the table for a “sustainabl­e calm” in Gaza and a hostage release that he himself had agreed just days earlier, he set about underminin­g it at the weekend before Hamas could reply.

It started on the Sabbath when an unnamed official briefed Channel 12, the country’s biggest news station, that “Israel will under no circumstan­ces agree to end the war as part of a deal involving the release of hostages”.

“The IDF will enter Rafah and destroy the Hamas battalions remaining there, whether there is a temporary truce for releasing the hostages or not,” they added.

Mr Netanyahu has denied trying to sabotage the deal, but it later transpired that the anonymous source of the briefing was the prime minister himself.

Then on Sunday he doubled down, his behaviour verging on the messianic. On the eve of Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, he spoke of dark forces from the “internatio­nal community” trying to restrain Israel, and warned: “We cannot trust the promises of gentiles.”

At the ceremony itself, he added: “From here, from Jerusalem, on the eve of Holocaust Memorial Day, I send a message, loud and clear: ‘You will not tie our hands.’

“If Israel is forced to stand alone, we will stand alone, and will continue to smite our enemies until we achieve victory. Even if we must stand alone, we will continue fighting human evil.”

To the fighter pilots from the UK, France and America who just three weeks before had risked their lives shooting down a fusillade of more than 300 drones and missiles launched at Israel from Iran, his words may have stung a bit.

But, as his psychologi­cal profilers observed way back when: “Some [of his] behaviours betray self-involvemen­t to the point that others receive no considerat­ion… an equally clear trait is Netanyahu’s difficulty in appreciati­ng perspectiv­es other than his own.”

In Israel itself, people do not find Mr Netanyahu’s behaviour so surprising. They have long been inured to his antics.

“He’s made a whole career out of doing things that nobody ever did before and are considered scandalous,” said Dr Dahlia Scheindlin, an Israeli political scientist, pollster and political consultant.

“So I don’t think it’s that extraordin­ary that he would both violate the Sabbath [for his religious voters] in order to torpedo a deal that the majority of the Israeli public desperatel­y wants.”

Almost all domestic political analysis in Israel portrays Mr Netanyahu as something akin to a trapped beast fighting for its life.

He has long been facing corruption charges that could land him in jail and he has recently become convinced – probably not unreasonab­ly – that he will soon be the subject of an arrest warrant from the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in the Hague.

Some say his ego and survival instinct should take him in the direction of Menachem Begin, Israel’s sixth prime minister, Nobel laureate (and former terrorist) who signed the country’s historic peace deal with Egypt in 1979. This is something the

Americans have been encouragin­g Netanyahu towards.

Sign a deal with Hamas, they say, and you will enable a historic normalisat­ion of relations with Saudi Arabia and a new relational security alliance against Iran. Like Begin, you too could yet secure a positive place in history.

But as Dr Dahlia Scheindlin points out, the parliament­ary maths is difficult and uncertain. If he agrees to a deal with Hamas, the extreme Rightwing parties upon which his governing coalition relies will walk out. They want “total victory” and will settle for nothing less.

Opposition parties have said they will prop the government up if a deal can be done to save the remaining hostages – filling in the gap left by the extreme Right.

“They will immediatel­y jump in to support the government, they have said that repeatedly, and they will indeed do it", the Israeli economist Manuel Trajtenber­g told The Telegraph.

But this is unlikely to be enough for a man with the psychologi­cal profile of Mr Netanyahu. Were he to agree to such an arrangemen­t, the opposition would have him exactly where they have always wanted him – under their control.

One false move on his part and they could dissolve the government and call fresh elections – which he would almost certainly lose.

“Netanyahu sees the game of politics as being governed by the “laws of the jungle", where the strong survive and the weak fall by the wayside,” says the old profile. “To him, achievemen­t of the goal justifies any political means.”

‘Netanyahu sees the game of politics as being governed by the “laws of the jungle”’

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