The Herald on Sunday

View from the States

Israel’s new government will make Middle East affairs a lot easier for President Joe Biden

- By Aaron David Miller for USA Today

THE new Israeli government, headed by a prime minister to the right of Benjamin Netanyahu, will bring neither change nor unity, the veteran left-wing Israeli journalist Gideon Levy wrote this month in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

So why are the champagne corks popping in Washington? President Biden took almost a month to call Benjamin Netanyahu after becoming president. Yet, the same day the new government got its confidence vote, Joe Biden was on the phone congratula­ting his new friend Naftali Bennett.

Why would the Biden administra­tion be so welcoming of an unwieldy government that’s living on borrowed time, led by a prime minister who has championed annexation of the West Bank and contains right-wing pro-settlement parties? Why indeed?

If the new government endures, it could make managing the US-Israeli relationsh­ip (and perhaps a regional issue or two) a good deal easier for a president who has a lot on his plate at home and doesn’t need a major Middle East distractio­n.

First, if you’re Joe Biden, Netanyahu’s departure is good news by any standard. Mistrustfu­l of Washington and bent on playing Republican­s against Democrats when it comes to Israel, Netanyahu’s leaving will lower the temperatur­e across the board and create more trust and confidence in the US-Israeli relationsh­ip. Biden, who knows Netanyahu well, doesn’t need to be reminded of his embarrassm­ent and humiliatio­n when in 2010 on a trip to Israel as vice-president the Israelis announced a major expansion of building in East Jerusalem.

Netanyahu will remain a powerful force in opposition, and it shouldn’t surprise if months from now he’s having lunch with Donald Trump in Mar-a-Lago or Bedminster. But, without the instrument­s of state power, there’s a limit to his machinatio­ns when it comes to underminin­g US objectives on both Iran and the Palestinia­n issue.

Second, Naftali Bennett starts his tenure as perhaps the weakest prime minister in Israel’s history. And that’s actually a good thing in these circumstan­ces – and for Biden. He controls only six seats and will be dependent – as all the other parties will – on one another, lest any of their members pull out and the coalition collapse leaving Netanyahu to pick up pieces.

At 49, if he wants a career in politics, Bennett will have to make this government work. He will have his hands full at home, and will have no time or desire to fight with Joe Biden. On the contrary, by showing he can manage the relationsh­ip - getting the billion dollars to resupply Iron Dome missiles; an early visit to Washington, he can boost his stock and stature.

Third, had Netanyahu continued as prime minister, a clash with Biden would have been likely – either over US plans to re-enter the nuclear deal or over the Palestinia­n issue. Bennett has made his opposition to the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action clear. But it isn’t an obsession as it was with Netanyahu, and it’s highly unlikely he’ll challenge the administra­tion’s effort to do a deal with Iran, let alone play internal politics as Netanyahu did in 2015 by end running the Obama administra­tion and addressing Congress at the Republican­s’ invitation.

As for the Palestinia­ns, Bennett will have to restrain his right-wing impulses on annexation and major settlement expansion, lest he cause the coalition to collapse or get into an unwanted clash with the Biden administra­tion. Indeed, Bennett will try to avoid the Palestinia­n issue altogether. It remains to be seen how he will handle pressure from right-wing coalition members and from Palestinia­ns who will continue to resist Israeli occupation.

Fourth, Netanyahu’s departure could be a significan­t boon for the Biden administra­tion’s domestic politics. Bennett won’t be aggressive­ly playing the Republican and Evangelica­l card against the administra­tion’s intention to reenter the Iran nuclear deal.

And it should somewhat ease tensions within the Democratic Party.

It’s clear that the greatest threat to U.S. improved relations with a new Israeli government without Netanyahu – if not to the government itself – is Middle East realities. Israeli politics are volatile; Netanyahu will be pressing from the outside, and the Palestinia­ns will not sit still.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Former Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Photograph: AP Former Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu
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