FrontLine

Netanyahu redux

Benjamin Netanyahu will now be leading, as part of a coalition of extreme right-wing and ultraortho­dox parties, the most extreme and xenophobic government Israel has seen since it came into existence 74 years ago.

- BY JOHN CHERIAN

INFLUENTIA­L SECTIONS OF THE US AND European political establishm­ents appear shocked by the results of Israel’s general election held on November 1. For the first time, a coalition of extreme right-wing and ultraortho­dox parties will rule Israel. Although the US government was quick to congratula­te Benjamin Netanyahu on his victory, administra­tion officials went public with their discomfitu­re about the possible make-up of the government. Right-wing government­s around the world were happy that Netanyahu was back in the saddle. Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary and Prime Minister Narendra Modi were among the world leaders to immediatel­y congratula­te him. Netanyahu, who first became Prime Minister in 1996, is known to share a good rapport with right-wing leaders around the world, including former US President Donald Trump.

FIFTH ELECTION IN FOUR AND A HALF YEARS

This election was the fifth to be held in Israel in the last four and a half years. The one held in June last year saw Netanyahu’s Likud party get the largest number of seats in the 120-member Knesset (parliament). But the opposition forged a wide-ranging coalition of eight parties with differing policies to form a government with a wafer-thin majority. For the first time, a Palestinia­n party, Ra’am, agreed to officially extend support to the government.

As quid pro quo, the short-lived government pledged to increase funding to municipali­ties and areas where the Palestinia­n population resides within Israel. Ra’am supported the coalition government until the very end despite the war the Israeli army unleashed on Gaza and the escalating state-sponsored violence against Palestinia­ns in occupied East Jerusalem and the West Bank.

The Jewish parties in the coalition, led by Yair Lapid of the Yesh Atid party, agreed to suspend talks on Palestinia­n statehood during their time in power and to keep Netanyahu out of power and concede the Prime Minister’s post for the first two years to Naftali Bennett, an avowed Zionist and former leader of the settlers. Bennett’s Yamina party had won only six seats.

It was no surprise that sharp internal contradict­ions caused the Bennett-lapid-led “government of change” to fall before it could complete a year in office. Lapid became the caretaker Prime Minister as per the powershari­ng agreement. In the latest election, the Yamina party and the centre-left Meretz party, which was also part of the previous coalition, failed to get representa­tion in the Knesset. Meretz narrowly failed to cross the 3.5 per cent threshold of votes required. Bennett announced his retirement from politics.

Despite the Bennett-lapid-led government being dependent on a Palestinia­n party for survival, repression only increased in the occupied territorie­s. Palestinia­ns constitute 21 per cent of Israel’s population of 9.3 million; 20 per cent of the doctors and 25 per cent of the nurses in Israel are Palestinia­ns. Palestinia­ns living in Israel have the right to vote, but the 5.5 million Palestinia­ns residing in the occupied territorie­s do not have this right. The 7,00,000 illegal Jewish settlers in the West Bank not only have the right to vote but in fact set the agenda for this election: the expropriat­ion of more Palestinia­n land.

The statements and actions of extremist Jewish politician­s in the occupied territorie­s have played a big

role in precipitat­ing the current cycle of violence. There were more house demolition­s and incarcerat­ions of Palestinia­ns in the past one year than in the last few years when Netanyahu was in office. The killing of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh happened under their watch. The increasing Palestinia­n resistance since the beginning of the year has only strengthen­ed the hands of Netanyahu and his allies in the religious Right. Netanyahu and his supporters claimed that only a Likud-led government could tame the resistance and put the twostate solution to rest forever.

The 73-year-old Netanyahu, who is still on trial for three separate charges relating to corruption, fraud, and breach of trust, will now be leading the most extreme and xenophobic government Israel has seen since it came into existence 74 years ago. One of the first priorities of the incoming government will be to get the charges against him dropped. In mid October, the Religious Zionism Party, which may bag the Justice Ministry, announced a “law and justice” plan to drasticall­y curtail the powers of the judiciary. If implemente­d, the plan would give sitting Prime Ministers immunity from prosecutio­n. Critics called it “the rescue plan for Netanyahu” and said it would turn corruption into the “official religion of Israel”.

The Religious Zionism Party is expected to be the major partner in the Netanyahu administra­tion. It emerged as the third biggest party in the Knesset, winning 14 seats. The other coalition partners will be two more ultraortho­dox parties, the Shas and the Union for Traditiona­l Judaism party.

Netanyahu played a key role in brokering the merger of the far-right Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) party headed by Itamar Ben-gvir and the Religious Zionist

One of the first priorities of the incoming government will be to get the charges against Netanyahu dropped.

party led by Bezalel Smotrich. The pooling of their votes enabled them to enter the Knesset a few years ago for the first time.

NEW POWER BROKERS

They have now emerged as the new power brokers, filling the void left by the fading away of other religious, centrist, and far-right parties in Israeli politics. After the results were out, Ben-gvir talked about occupying the highest political post in the country. “Friends, I am only 46 years old,” he told his supporters. “I’m not Prime Minister—yet.”

The extremist leader has come a long way in politics despite his track record as a racist and a bigot. In 1995, as a very young man, he threatened Yitzhak Rabin a fortnight before his assassinat­ion by another Jewish extremist. Rabin had incurred the wrath of Zionist zealots for signing the Oslo Accords. Today, Ben-gvir has become an integral part of the Israeli political establishm­ent. The Labour Party, which was once led by Rabin and which ruled Israel for more than two decades since its founding, now has only five members in the Knesset.

Even US Senator Robert Menendez, who chairs the

Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and is otherwise a fervent backer of the Zionist cause, had, according to reports, warned Netanyahu that including people like Ben-gvir in government would have an adverse impact on the bipartisan support for Israel that has traditiona­lly existed in the US. “Death to the Palestinia­ns” is a favourite slogan of Ben-gvir’s at public meetings and marches. Israeli media has reported that the administra­tion of US President Joe Biden “is following the political developmen­ts in Israel with concern”.

The religious nationalis­t and ultraortho­dox parties that have replaced the secular parties in the Knesset have been calling for the creation of a theocratic Jewish state in which Palestinia­ns will be reduced officially to the status of second-class citizens. The racist policies that the Israeli state has adopted, which closely resemble the erstwhile apartheid system in South Africa, could soon be formalised. A survey by the Pew Research Center revealed that only a minority of Israeli Jews were in favour of equal rights for Palestinia­ns. According to the survey, 49 per cent of those polled between the ages of 18 and 49 believe that Palestinia­ns should be “expelled or transferre­d from Israel”.

Apologists for Israel continue to claim that Israel is the only functionin­g democracy in the region. The Religious Zionism Party subscribes to the racist ideology of Kahanism. Rabbi Meir Kahane, an American-born Zionist, called for the expulsion of all Palestinia­ns from Israel and the occupied territorie­s. Baruch Goldstein, one of his followers, single-handedly massacred 29 Palestinia­ns and injured 125 others in 1994. The incident, known as the “Cave of the Patriarchs massacre”, is an open wound in the Palestinia­n psyche. Ben-gvir once hosted Goldstein at his home in Hebron and used to keep a framed photograph of him there. Ben-gvir has on several occasions praised Goldstein and the Kahanist ideology.

The Kahanists are classified as a “terrorist” movement by the US State Department. Yaakov Katz, editorin-chief of The Jerusalem Post, said that Ben-gvir was a modern Israeli version of “an American white supremacis­t and European fascist”. He wrote that a government that included characters like him “will take all the contours of a fascist state”. Smotrich once said that Jewish and Palestinia­n mothers should have separate wards in hospitals. He also claimed that there was “no such thing as Jewish terrorism” despite plenty of evidence of Jews taking the law into their own hands against Palestinia­ns in the occupied territorie­s.

The religious and ultraortho­dox parties are lobbying to get key Cabinet portfolios such as Defence, Finance, Justice, and Public Security. Their stated aim is to expand the occupation, and some of their leaders have once again called for the expulsion of Palestinia­ns from the occupied territorie­s. In his victory speech, Ben-gvir said: “It’s time to be owners of the country again.”

His party’s manifesto promises “the establishm­ent of sovereignt­y over all parts of Eretz Israel liberated in the six-day war and the settlement of the enemies of Israel in the Arab lands that surround our small country”. He said that the people who voted for his party “want to walk safely on the street, not to have our police officers and soldiers restrained, and to completely separate those who are loyal to the State of Israel and those who are not”.

In his previous stint as Prime Minister, Netanyahu was on the verge of officially annexing the most productive parts of the West Bank, which is already pockmarked with Jewish settlement­s. Among the other priorities on the agenda of the Religious Zionist Party are the demolition of the Al-aqsa Mosque to make way for the reconstruc­tion of the Temple Mount as it used to exist in biblical times; the imposition of Jewish laws; and the underminin­g of the judicial system that was establishe­d when the country gained independen­ce. The Ra’am party warned that occupation of the mosque by Jewish extremist groups would lead to another war in the region.

TWO-TIER LEGAL SYSTEM

The situation for Palestinia­ns inside Israel and in the occupied territorie­s is getting more difficult by the day. Already a two-tier legal system operates in the West Bank; Palestinia­ns are tried in military courts, while the few Jews who happen to run afoul of the law appear before a civil court. Israeli Jews accused of killing Palestinia­ns are let off in no time while Palestinia­ns accused of throwing stones spend years in jail. Rarely have Israeli courts sentenced violent Jewish settlers for crimes against Palestinia­ns.

Palestinia­ns recall that it was the provocativ­e presence of Ben-gvir in Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem that contribute­d to the start of the 11-day war in Gaza in May last year. He had been leading a mob demanding the ouster of Palestinia­ns from the area. Ben-gvir returned to Sheikh Jarrah in October this year, where he was seen brandishin­g a gun and encouragin­g his supporters to shoot at Palestinia­ns. Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak warned that “the unholy alliance between Netanyahu and Ben-gvir and the messianic racists” constitute­s a “true threat to the state of Israel”. m

 ?? ?? BENJAMIN NETANYAHU and his wife, Sara, at the Likud party headquarte­rs in Jerusalem on
November 2, after exit polls made it clear that he would be Prime Minister yet again. He first became Prime Minister in 1996.
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU and his wife, Sara, at the Likud party headquarte­rs in Jerusalem on November 2, after exit polls made it clear that he would be Prime Minister yet again. He first became Prime Minister in 1996.
 ?? ?? A SETTLER LEADER holds an Israeli flag during a scouting mission to find new hilltops for settlement­s near Kokhav Hashahar, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on November 6. The 7,00,000 illegal Jewish settlers in the West Bank set the agenda for this election: the expropriat­ion of more Palestinia­n land.
A SETTLER LEADER holds an Israeli flag during a scouting mission to find new hilltops for settlement­s near Kokhav Hashahar, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on November 6. The 7,00,000 illegal Jewish settlers in the West Bank set the agenda for this election: the expropriat­ion of more Palestinia­n land.
 ?? ?? A PALESTINIA­N HURLS STONES at a member of Israeli security forces amid clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron on November 4.
A PALESTINIA­N HURLS STONES at a member of Israeli security forces amid clashes in the West Bank city of Hebron on November 4.

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