The Korea Times

Last days of Netanyahu?

- By Shlomo Ben-Ami Shlomo Ben-Ami, a former Israeli foreign minister, is vice president of the Toledo Internatio­nal Center for Peace. He is the author of “Scars of War, Wounds of Peace: The Israeli-Arab Tragedy.” Copyright belongs to Project Syndicate (www

TEL AVIV — At long last, Israel has taken a step back from the religious nationalis­t abyss into which Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had been leading it. In the Sept. 17 parliament­ary election, the country’s second in five months, the “natural coalition” of Netanyahu’s Likud party, Orthodox groups, and proto-fascist factions failed to reach the 61-seat threshold that would have enabled him to form another government.

For Netanyahu, who has spent 13 years in power, this election was only partly about his nationalis­t political project. His main aim was to reproduce the only coalition that could grant him parliament­ary immunity from his imminent indictment on charges of fraud, bribery, and breach of trust.

Fighting literally for his freedom, Netanyahu ignored legal and ethical rules of campaign conduct. For starters, he recklessly pledged to annex the Jordan Valley — part of the West Bank — without any strategic assessment of the consequenc­es.

In addition, he proposed a bill that would have allowed Likud activists to place cameras in polling stations; when the bill failed to pass, Likud claimed that opposition parties were planning to steal the election. Meanwhile, the prime minister’s Facebook page warned supporters that Israeli Arabs “want to annihilate all of us.”

Furthermor­e, Netanyahu called on the public to boycott Israel’s most popular television channel for producing an “anti-Semitic” series on the kidnapping and murder of a Palestinia­n teenager by Jewish extremists in 2014. In reality, he was attempting to stop the channel from airing leaked material pertaining to the criminal investigat­ion against him.

In his desperatio­n to be re-elected, Netanyahu also irresponsi­bly fanned regional tensions in order to bolster his reputation as “Mr. Security.” Israeli attacks against Iranian targets in Syria and Iraq suddenly increased exponentia­lly amid a blaze of media publicity (against the advice of the military, which has always counseled opacity in such matters).

More audaciousl­y still, Netanyahu considered postponing the entire electoral process by starting an all-out war against Hamas in Gaza, which he had always been averse to doing.

Thankfully, the army’s chief of general staff, Aviv Kohavi, and Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit blocked this initiative, arguing that Netanyahu could not initiate hostilitie­s without following due legal procedure. Netanyahu spoke with Trump about a U.S.-Israeli defense treaty, an absurd idea that the entire security establishm­ent has always opposed for limiting Israel’s freedom of action.

Alas, Israel’s fractious political scene and absurdly proportion­al electoral system hardly ever produce clear-cut results. True to form, the country now faces a period of political deadlock. Benny Gantz’s Blue and White party, a recent amalgamati­on of center-right groups headed by three former chiefs of the army’s general staff, won a similar number of seats to Likud.

But it will be unable to form a viable alternativ­e coalition with the diminished left — the Labor Party and the Democratic Union (which includes former Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s new party — and the Arab Joint List.

Even if these parties did command a majority, it would take a dramatic act of political bravery for three former generals to form a government with an Arab party consisting of anti-Zionists and Islamist groups. Yet excluding the Joint List from the coalition-building process would be an unpardonab­le blunder.

These Arab parliament­ary factions represent a genuine desire among Israel’s Arab minority — which comprises 20 percent of the population and is currently undergoing a momentous process of “Israelizat­ion” — to form part of an all-Israeli political project based on democratic governance and an end to the politics of xenophobia and incitement. To complicate matters further, the key to breaking the post-election deadlock is Avigdor Lieberman’s Yisrael Beitenu party. A political cynic known for his anti-Arab outbursts and annexation­ist zeal — he himself lives in a West Bank settlement — Lieberman almost doubled the number of seats won by his party.

He did so by pledging to enter only a grand national unity government with Likud and Blue and White, while excluding the Orthodox parties and the messianic far right. Blue and White eventually seconded Lieberman’s proposal, but with one crucial twist: it would not share power with an indicted Netanyahu.

The political battle will therefore now center on the key question in this election: Netanyahu, yes or no? Will Blue and White stand by its pledge? And will Likud members find the courage to unseat their leader (presumably an easier task now that his spell has clearly been broken)?

Israeli politician­s’ ingenuity in circumvent­ing their professed principles should never be underestim­ated. One way out of the impasse could indeed be Lieberman’s grand coalition, but with the premiershi­p rotating between Gantz and Netanyahu: The former could head the new government for the first two years of its term, while Netanyahu deals with his legal problems. But this is only one of many creative options that might emerge in the coming days.

Clearly, this election is no victory for the Israeli peace camp, or even for the center-left. Whatever government emerges will not resuscitat­e the all-but-dead two-state solution, and will most likely launch a massive military campaign against Hamas in Gaza — something on which the two largest parties concur. It is also likely to engage with the United States regarding President Donald Trump’s “deal of the century” aimed at strengthen­ing the Palestinia­n economy — a plan that the Palestinia­ns are expected to ignore altogether.

Nonetheles­s, the election result comes as a relief, and one is right to sense a breath of fresh air. Israeli voters have stopped the country’s slide toward xenophobic theocracy (one hopes not just temporaril­y). Moreover, halting Netanyahu, with his imperial ways and his divisive politics of hate and incitement, was no small achievemen­t.

Israel’s national poet Nathan Alterman might therefore have described the outcome as the “joy of the poor,” also the title of arguably his most famous work. But with the country again preoccupie­d with political bargaining, and regional tensions on the rise, it remains to be seen how long the elation will last — and whether Netanyahu really has left the political stage.

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