Chattanooga Times Free Press

NAFTALI BENNETT’S EXIT INTERVIEW

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No elected Israeli prime minister ever had a shorter tenure than Naftali Bennett. On Monday, after a string of parliament­ary defections, he announced that he would dissolve parliament and call new elections, Israel’s fifth since 2019, after serving barely a year in office. On Tuesday, he WhatsApp-ed me from Tel Aviv for a phone call about his record.

Length, he suggested, should not be mistaken for quality.

“In a world where domestic polarizati­on is becoming almost the single biggest challenge, the experiment succeeded,” he said of his government. By the “experiment,” he means the most ideologica­lly, ethnically and religiousl­y diverse government in Israel’s history, encompassi­ng Orthodox Jews and conservati­ve Islamists, hip Tel Avivians and former generals, the nationalis­t right and the peace-camp left — an example of true diversity and inclusion that Israel’s critics rarely recognize.

That itself was a triumph, even if short-lived, and even if chiefly united by a shared loathing of Benjamin Netanyahu. Does Bennett consider the former prime minister a danger to democracy? “In the past year we restored decency, honesty and even meeting commitment­s,” Bennett said, only somewhat sidesteppi­ng the question.

Was anything beyond symbolism accomplish­ed over the past year? Quite a lot, Bennett said. Unemployme­nt is low, economic growth is high (as are housing prices), and his government managed to pass a budget — Israel’s first in three years. There is a historic free-trade agreement with the United Arab Emirates, signed last month, that is expected to lead to 1,000 Israeli companies setting up shop in the UAE by the end of the year. There is Israel’s participat­ion in the U.S.-led Middle East Air Defense Alliance, confirmed this week, that signals a further consolidat­ion of ties between the Jewish state and its region.

Is Saudi Arabia a part of this alliance? I asked. And has the prime minister met with his Saudi counterpar­ts, including Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, to discuss it? “I cannot elaborate, neither on the former part of the question nor on the latter,” he said a little tellingly. “I don’t want to hurt stuff.”

Then there is Iran. Bennett was delighted when the Biden administra­tion refused to remove Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard from the U.S. list of sanctioned foreign-terrorist organizati­ons, and he said the fact Iran didn’t walk away from the negotiatin­g table is proof of how badly it needs a deal.

Tehran, he said, is “violating fundamenta­l requiremen­ts” of the Nuclear Nonprolife­ration Treaty and has sought to strike Israel directly using unmanned aerial vehicles. The Israeli response, according to reporting in The New York Times, has included the destructio­n of an Iranian drone facility and a military site, and the assassinat­ion, in a quiet residentia­l neighborho­od of Tehran, of a senior Iranian officer believed to be part of Iran’s Unit 840, suspected to be responsibl­e for carrying out assassinat­ions and abductions abroad.

When Iranians “hit us through proxies or directly, they will pay a price in Iran,” Bennett said, outlining what he calls his “Octopus doctrine” of striking Tehran at its head rather than its tentacles. “It turns out these guys are more vulnerable than they seem,” he added tauntingly. “The Iranian regime is rotten, corrupt — and incompeten­t.”

What, then, will be the historical verdict on Bennett’s government? Although he insisted his “experiment” was a success, he acknowledg­ed its opponents on both political extremes “found the weakest links and applied tremendous pressure.” But he also prides himself on what he was able to accomplish with radically different coalition partners by simply being willing to “set aside ideologica­l disagreeme­nts” and focus on “better education, better jobs, better infrastruc­ture.”

“We are not trying to decide what God will decide in 1,000 years. We focus on today,” he said. Not the worst epitaph for a government that can still serve as a role model, in Israel and beyond.

 ?? ?? Bret Stephens
Bret Stephens

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