Los Angeles Times

Israel’s kingmaker may emerge as king breaker

Erstwhile Netanyahu ally who triggered two elections this year may play crucial role.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — He is a right-wing nationalis­t who once served as chief of staff to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with whom he shares a long political partnershi­p.

These days, Avigdor Lieberman seems bent on bending Netanyahu to his will.

When Israelis go to the polls Tuesday for the second time this year, they will have Lieberman to thank or blame, since he is in the improbable position of having forced both elections and could ultimately be responsibl­e for Netanyahu’s political demise. Polls show Netanyahu’s Likud Party and the opposition party led by former army Chief of Staff Benny Gantz in a dead heat, each far from the 61 parliament­ary seats required to form a government.

Lieberman resigned as Netanyahu’s defense minister in late 2018, believing the prime minister had been too soft when he agreed to a cease-fire with the Palestinia­n militant group Hamas. That led Netanyahu to call early elections in April of this year. Six weeks later, Lieberman’s refusal to compromise with ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties prevented Netanyahu from forming the hardright coalition he had banked on — and thrust Israel into its second consecutiv­e campaign.

Because he stands up to right-wing religious Jews, Lieberman has become the unlikely hero of some on Israel’s left. “Everyone loves him now that he stood up to Netanyahu,” said Nurit Kedar, a documentar­y filmmaker who recently released a movie about Lieberman, “but he’s still an outsider. No one really knows him.”

Kedar called her movie “Lieber-man,” which she took from one of Lieberman’s early campaign ads, aimed at recent immigrants from the former Soviet Union: “Super-man — Nyet. Bat-man — Nyet. Lieberman — Da.”

Burly and opaque, Lieberman retains a preternatu­ral ability to infuriate Netanyahu.

Late on May 29, faced with an unmoving Lieberman, who would not budge regarding a controvers­ial law on the draft of ultra-Orthodox men, Netanyahu conceded defeat in his efforts to form a new coalition government, while sputtering that Lieberman “is part of the left.”

The angry accusation produced laughter among reporters who cover Lieberman as a pillar of the Israeli right. He is known for advocating capital punishment for terrorists and proposing an oath of loyalty for Israel’s Arab citizens.

In its final editorial before the vote, the liberal daily Haaretz warned its readers that “contrary to Netanyahu’s lie, [Lieberman] is actually deep in the nationalis­t right. It’s not inconceiva­ble that after the election, with a bundle of Knesset seats in his pocket, he’ll ‘remember’ this and join a Netanyahu government.”

Lieberman’s wild ride this year has hinged on the disaffecti­on of Israel’s secular majority in the face of demands made by the ultra-religious minority, who have traditiona­lly played a kingmaker role in Israeli coalition politics, gaining significan­t social and financial concession­s. Although Netanyahu is not personally religious, he has built a close political partnershi­p with the Orthodox community. Lieberman found a way to upend that alliance.

“He pulled a chess move on them,” said Gideon Rahat, a political science professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. “He recreated himself as a centrist candidate by positionin­g himself on the right in terms of national security and on the left in terms of the religious right. No one else catered to those voters. And all he needs to win is to hold the center.”

Rahat, who is a senior fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute, pointed out an “absurdity” of Tuesday’s vote: With Netanyahu having moved his party sharply to the right, “Lieberman’s interests dovetail with those of Arab voters. The bigger the Arab turnout, pulling the center to the left, the better Lieberman’s chances of remaining the power broker.”

If President Trump reveals his long-anticipate­d plan for Israeli-Palestinia­n peace immediatel­y after the Israeli elections, as some administra­tion officials have foreseen, Lieberman, who defends the traditiona­l American ideal of a twostate solution, could become a crucial partner.

Although U.S. Ambassador David Friedman says that the administra­tion is “not ready to talk about a Palestinia­n state,” preferring the notion of an autonomous Palestinia­n territory, and Netanyahu recently promised to annex parts of the occupied West Bank, Lieberman speaks easily of a “future Palestinia­n state” even as he dismisses immediate prospects for peace.

“If you go back to the original United Nations resolution,” he said in an interview with The Times this summer, referring to the 1947 partition plan that created the state of Israel, “they used the words ‘Jewish and Arab states’ — the idea was to create two different states.”

Shelving the concept of any peace process as “an irrelevant expression in the Middle East,” Lieberman discussed Israel in wider, regional terms, and said that Trump’s vision for the volatile area, including an alliance between Israel and Saudi Arabia, is “the right approach.”

“No Muslim countries have peace, if you compare them with the U.S.-Canada border or with the open-border European Union, as I understand peace,” he said, expressing astonishme­nt that the U.N. believes 600,000 Syrians have lost their lives in the decade-long civil war “and no one cares.”

“Today is the first time we have a real opportunit­y to change reality in the Middle East, starting with cooperatio­n between Israel and the [Persian] Gulf states,” he said. “For them, today Israel is not a problem but a solution. They have natural resources and money. We have high tech, experience as the start-up nation, and strong security forces. This cooperatio­n could change the whole Middle East.”

Lieberman, 61, born in Soviet Moldova, immigrated to Israel 40 years ago, practicall­y penniless.

He became politicall­y active while a Hebrew University student, joining the Likud and meteorical­ly rising to become Netanyahu’s feared chief of staff.

Despite his reputation as an incendiary provocateu­r, he has not joined Netanyahu’s campaign of anti-Arab rhetoric, and people who have worked with Lieberman in his roles as minister of national infrastruc­ture, minister of transporta­tion, minister of strategic affairs, deputy prime minister, minister of foreign affairs and minister of defense argue that he is more a pragmatist than a racist ideologue.

Former U.S. Ambassador Daniel Shapiro, who shepherded the unsuccessf­ul peace process advanced by then-Secretary of State John F. Kerry, said he “discovered that Lieberman wasn’t exactly what his public image would lead you to imagine.”

“He was not fundamenta­lly opposed to what Kerry was trying to do,” said Shapiro, now a visiting fellow at Tel Aviv’s Institute for National Security Studies. “He is comfortabl­e in his own skin. He doesn’t care what others think of him.”

Israel may awaken deadlocked on Wednesday, with Lieberman playing a decisive role.

Gantz has vowed he will not join a government including Netanyahu, who faces an early October judicial hearing ahead of expected indictment­s in three criminal cases.

Lieberman has no such compunctio­ns. On election eve, his spokeswoma­n, Elina Bardach-Yalov, said that the Yisrael Beiteinu party would not sign a coalition agreement with any Arab-majority party, with the ultra-Orthodox, with the left-wing Meretz party or with what she called “Netanyahu’s messianic partners,” but added that Lieberman was untroubled by the looming criminal charges and hoped to re-create a Netanyahu government.

“You’re innocent until you’re found guilty,” she said, “even if you’re the prime minister.”

 ?? Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images ?? ISRAELI politician Avigdor Lieberman, left, campaigns in Nahal Oz. The leader of the right-wing, nationalis­t Yisrael Beiteinu party retains a preternatu­ral ability to infuriate Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images ISRAELI politician Avigdor Lieberman, left, campaigns in Nahal Oz. The leader of the right-wing, nationalis­t Yisrael Beiteinu party retains a preternatu­ral ability to infuriate Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
 ?? Bernat Armangue Associated Press ?? LIEBERMAN, left, with Netanyahu in 2012. Lieberman resigned as defense minister in late 2018 over the premier’s cease-fire deal with Hamas militants.
Bernat Armangue Associated Press LIEBERMAN, left, with Netanyahu in 2012. Lieberman resigned as defense minister in late 2018 over the premier’s cease-fire deal with Hamas militants.
 ?? Jack Guez AFP/Getty Images ?? A BILLBOARD bears Lieberman’s image in Tel Aviv. The maverick politician has managed to upend Netanyahu’s alliance with the ultra-Orthodox.
Jack Guez AFP/Getty Images A BILLBOARD bears Lieberman’s image in Tel Aviv. The maverick politician has managed to upend Netanyahu’s alliance with the ultra-Orthodox.

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