New York Daily News

HAWKISH DOVE

In Israel, an ex-gen. aims to oust Netanyahu

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — Former military chief Benny Gantz has burst onto Israel’s political scene as the great hope of the country’s shrinking “peace camp” with a message that is anything but dovish.

The retired general, who wants to topple Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in April 9 elections, boasts of killing Palestinia­n militants and aligns himself with political hard-liners. He fires back at Netanyahu’s criticism with scathing counteratt­acks.

In today’s Israel, Gantz’s ready-to-rumble rhetoric appears to be the only way to bring down the long-serving Netanyahu. That’s turning him into an unlikely source of hope for Israelis who view ending their country’s rule over the Palestinia­ns, now in its 51st year, as a priority.

Yossi Beilin, an architect of the 1993 interim peace accords with the Palestinia­ns, said fear of another Netanyahu term is driving much of the support for Gantz. He called Gantz a “black dove” — an imperfect but tolerable alternativ­e to Netanyahu.

“Not that I agree with everything he says, but many of the things he is saying are OK from my point of view,” Beilin said.

Opinion polls forecast victory for Netanyahu’s Likud Party. But since Gantz’s recent maiden political speech, his new “Israel Resilience” party has emerged as No. 2.

The race could swing in the challenger’s favor. Netanyahu faces possible indictment in a series of corruption investigat­ions, perhaps before the elections. Meanwhile, Gantz is reportedly exploring mergers with other centrist parties.

Gantz appears to be modeling himself after Ehud Barak and the late Yitzhak Rabin — former military chiefs-turned-prime ministers. Both used military credential­s to lead Israel to peace negotiatio­ns with the Palestinia­ns.

Wary of being branded a “leftist,” considered a putdown by many Israelis, Gantz has said little about his vision of peace with the Palestinia­ns. He dresses his rhetoric in security terms as he tries to win support from Netanyahu’s nationalis­t base.

In his January speech, Gantz bragged about assassinat­ing Ahmed Jabari, a former Hamas military commander whose death in an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip sparked an eightday war in 2012.

“The heads of the terrorist organizati­ons need to know that Ahmed Jabari was not the first, nor may he be the last,” Gantz warned.

Without giving details, he vowed to “strive for peace” and — if that is impossible — to shape a “new reality.” He said he’d strengthen West Bank settlement blocs and retain control of the Jordan Valley, a strategic section of the occupied West Bank the Palestinia­ns seek as the heartland of a future state.

A TV ad for Gantz’s party shows aerial footage of the airstrike on Jabari’s vehicle. A second ad shows images of Hamas funerals and boasts of killing 1,364 “terrorists” in the 2014 Israel-Hamas war.

Another video — later deleted from YouTube — featured drone footage of a devastated Gaza neighborho­od flattened in the same campaign. The ads ran with the slogan: “Only the strong win.”

The United Nations has said about two-thirds of more than 2,100 Palestinia­ns killed in the 2014 war were civilians. Among the dead were many civilians killed in airstrikes on homes where Israel suspected militants to be hiding.

A UN report has said Israel’s actions may have amounted to war crimes. Gantz and Israel’s then-air force chief are being sued by a Palestinia­n family in a Dutch court.

In Israel, the 2014 Gaza war is generally seen as having dealt a blow to Hamas, and Gantz’s military record an electoral asset. Driving home the point, he appointed Moshe Yaalon, another former military chief with hard-line political views, as his deputy.

Opinion polls show Gantz even with Netanyahu when it comes to fitness for prime minister and handling security. About one quarter of Gantz’s supporters formerly backed Likud or the allied Kulanu party.

Political scientist Reuven Hazan said Gantz’s tactics cater to widely held views among Israelis that internatio­nally recognized Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas is too weak to deliver results and that Gaza’s Hamas is a terrorist group.

Israel’s electorate is mostly divided between the right wing that wants to preserve the status quo, a smaller “extreme right” that wants to annex occupied lands, and the center, which wants to find some sort of way to change the situation, Hazan said.

“Those who clearly stand up and say ‘two-state solution, we have to uproot settlement­s,’ they’re not winning elections in Israel these days,” he added.

 ?? AP ?? Retired Gen. Benny Gantz may be the man to end Israel’s rule over Palestinia­ns.
AP Retired Gen. Benny Gantz may be the man to end Israel’s rule over Palestinia­ns.

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