The Jewish Chronicle

Future’s bright, says Israel’s quiet operator

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STANDING IN the hotel lobby, Dore Gold could easily be mistaken for another anonymous, jetlagged businessma­n awaiting his next meeting.

Tourists wandering past him in central London on Sunday evening were oblivious to the presence of one of Israel’s key diplomats of the last quarter-of-acentury.

For years, Dr Gold’s mustachioe­d face has been instantly recognisab­le as he worked as a leading peace negotiator, UN envoy, and foreign affairs adviser to Benjamin Netanyahu.

Not much has changed in that respect — he remains, in many ways, the insider’s insider, having only last month quit, for family reasons, as director-general of Israel’s Foreign Affairs Ministry.

Over coffee, Dr Gold explains why he is so bullish about his country’s prospects at a time when millions await the impact of Donald Trump’s election, Brexit and ongoing uncertaint­y in the Middle East.

“You’re talking to somebody who up to a month ago was reading classified cables,” he explains in a gentle tone.

“Many people say Israel is more isolated than ever. But I saw foreign ministers pouring in to see our prime minister. We now have negotiatio­ns on free trade with pivotal countries in the Far East like South Korea, Japan, China and India. That’s a different reality to a country that is isolated.

“Africa is opening up. I would crisscross the Sahara having meetings. Israel is in demand; it is not isolated.”

If you closed your eyes, you could be forgiven for thinking you were listen- ing to Mr Netanyahu, so similar are the two men’s east coast US accents and forthright views.

Dr Gold, now in his 60s, is ostensibly in London to speak on a stellar panel in Parliament alongside historian Andrew Roberts, former Israeli ambassador to Canada Alan Baker, and Yair Hirschfeld, architect of the Oslo Accords.

The Jerusalem Centre for Public Affairs (JCPA), the think-tank Dr Gold serves as president, organised Tuesday’s event celebratin­g next year’s anniversar­y of the Balfour Declaratio­n alongside the Henry Jackson Society. The aim was to refute the slurs put forward at a session hosted by Baroness Tonge at the same venue in October.

It is his latest effort to hit back at those spewing hate. When Dr Gold sees the public arena turn against Israel, he acts. “We have a choice: we can sit silent and just let this pass, and say it happens all the time, or we stand up and object to these views.”

Repeatedly, he attacks those who see Hamas as being akin to the IRA and on the verge of a political transforma­tion. The West does not understand the Middle East, Dr Gold argues, and those who are “sympatheti­c” to Gaza’s Islamist rulers “should think twice”.

The visit to Britain doubles as the latest leg of Dr Gold’s one-man world tour. He has already held meetings with senior ministers in South Africa, and moves on to Washington and then Harvard later this week.

When he arrives in the United States, he will not be expressing the same concerns felt by many over Donald Trump’s election victory. While Dr Gold bluntly explains how he sees the “alt-right” movement — to which many Trump supporters are attracted — as “political trash”, he is prepared to wait for the President-elect to appoint key figures before he will “examine the administra­tion”.

His greater interest is in the “total chaos” engulfing the Middle East, and how the rest of the world will deal with it. Although a “very deep dialogue” is required with allies, he is adamant that Israel has new opportunit­ies.

Dr Gold’s approach may be surprising to many in the diaspora who are overwhelme­d with concerns about rising antisemiti­sm, the threat posed by hard-right politician­s, and Brexit.

“Israel has excellent relations with a number of key European states bilaterall­y. Many times you would find our problems were in Brussels, not in Paris, not in Munich, not in London. Israel has a better standing today than it did before,” he says.

While the issue of Brexit is brushed off as an almost complete irrelevanc­e to the Connecticu­t-born diplomat who has lived in Jerusalem since making aliyah more than 30 years ago, he rails against various EU initiative­s.

The insistence on labelling of products made in Israeli settlement­s gets particular­ly short shrift. It is “completely outlandish”, a “double standard” not applied to other conflict zones such as Kashmir or northern Cyprus.

It is an impressive tour of the geopolitic­al landscape, and my mind turns to Mr Netanyahu surpassing David Ben-Gurion as Israel’s longest-serving premier in a single stint. In Jerusalem, talk is of who his successor will be.

I ask about Dr Gold’s plans — does he expect to return to the political or diplomatic front-line?

“Right now I’m going to focus on my family but I’m not going out to pasture. I’ll be back,” he says, before emphasisin­g: “I said, I will be back.”

 ?? PHOTO: FLASH 90 ?? “I’ll be back”: Dore Gold
PHOTO: FLASH 90 “I’ll be back”: Dore Gold
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