THERE ARE two different opinions about Binyamin Netanyahu. It is difficult to believe that they concern the same person.
One
is that Netanyahu is a shallow politician, devoid of ideas and
convictions, who is led solely by his obsession to remain in power. This
Netanyahu has a good voice and a talent for making shallow speeches on
television, speeches devoid of any intellectual content – and that's
all.
This
Netanyahu is highly "pressurable" (a Hebrew word invented almost solely
for him), a man who will change his views according to political
expediency, disclaiming in the evening what he has said in the morning.
None of his words should be trusted. He will lie and cheat anytime to
assure his survival.
The
other Netanyahu is almost the exact opposite. A principled patriot, a
serious thinker, a statesman who sees danger beyond the horizon. This
Netanyahu is a gifted orator, able to move the US Congress and the UN
plenum, admired by the great mass of Israelis.
So which of these descriptions is true?
Neither.
IF
IT is true that the character of a person is shaped by his early
childhood, we must examine the background of Netanyahu in order to
understand him.
He
grew up in the shadow of a strong father. Benzion Millikowsky, who
changed his foreign name to the Hebrew Netanyahu, was a very dominant
and very unhappy person. Born in Warsaw, then a provincial town in the
Russian Empire, he immigrated to Palestine as a young man, studied
history at the new Hebrew University in Jerusalem and expected to become
a professor there. He was not accepted.
Benzion
was the son of an early adherent of Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky, the
extreme rightist Zionist leader. He inherited from his father a very
extremist outlook, and passed it on to his three sons. Binyamin was the
second one. His elder brother, still a child himself, called him Bibi,
and the childish appellation stuck.
Benzion's
rejection by the prestigious young Hebrew University turned him into a
bitter man, a bitterness that lasted until his death in 2012, at age
102. He was sure that this rejection had nothing to do with his academic
qualification, and everything with his ultra-nationalist opinions.
His
extreme Zionism did not stop him leaving Palestine and seeking his
academic luck in the United States, where a second-rate university gave
him a professorship. His life's work as a historian concerned the fate
of the Jews in medieval Christian Spain – the expulsion and inquisition.
It engendered in him a very dark world view: the conviction that Jews
will always be persecuted, that all Goyim (non-Jews) hate the Jews, that
a straight line connects the auto-da-fé of the Spanish inquisition with the Nazi Holocaust.
During
the years, the Netanyahu family went back and forth between the US and
Israel. Binyamin grew up in America, acquired perfect American English,
essential for his future career, studied and became a salesman. His
obvious talent for this profession attracted a Likud foreign minister,
who sent him to the UN as Israeli spokesman.
BENZION
NETANYAHU was not only a very bitter person, who accused the Zionist
and Israeli academic establishment of failing to recognize his academic
stature. He was also a very autocratic family man.
The
three Netanyahu boys lived in constant awe of Father. They were not
allowed to make any noise at home while the Great Man worked in his
closed study. They were not allowed to bring other boys home. Their
mother was completely devoted to her husband and served him in every
way, sacrificing her own personality.
In
every family, the second child of three is in a difficult position. He
is not admired like the eldest, nor indulged like the youngest. For
Binyamin this was especially hard, because of the personality of the
eldest.
Yonatan
Netanyahu (both names mean "God has given") seems to have been a
specially blessed boy. He was good-looking, gifted, much liked, even
admired. In the army, he became the commander of the revered Sayeret
Matkal ("General Staff Commando Unit") – the elite of the army's elite.
As
such he was the ground commander of the daring 1976 Entebbe commando
raid in Uganda, which liberated the captive passengers of a flight
hijacked by Palestinian and German guerillas on the way to Israel.
Yonatan was killed and became a national hero. He was also adored by his
father, who never quite accepted the qualities of his second son.
Between
his father, the embittered Great Thinker, and his elder brother, the
Legendary Hero, Binyamin grew up as a quiet but very ambitious boy, part
Israeli, part American. He worked for some time as a furniture
salesman, until he was discovered by the far-right Likud foreign
minister, Moshe Arens.
Between
his obsessive need to be approved by his father and to be found equal
to his glorious brother, Netanyahu's own character was forged. His
father never quite appreciated him, once saying that he would make a
good foreign minister, but not a prime minister.
Being
his father's son, Netanyahu incited the people against Yitzhak Rabin
after the Oslo Agreement and was photographed on the speaker's balcony
during the demonstration in which a symbolic coffin of Rabin was carried
around. Soon after, when Rabin was murdered, he denied all
responsibility.
Rabin's
successor, Shimon Peres, failed miserably, and Netanyahu became prime
minister. It was a total catastrophe. On the evening after the next
elections, when it be came clear that he had lost, multitudes streamed
to Tel Aviv's central square (now named after Rabin) in a spontaneous
demonstration of joy like that at the liberation of Paris.
His
successor, Labor's Ehud Barak, had no more luck. A former army Chief of
Staff, admired by many and especially by himself, he compelled
President Bill Clinton to convene an Israeli-Palestinian peace
conference at Camp David. Barak, who was quite ignorant of Palestinian
attitudes, came to dictate his terms and was shocked when they were
rejected. Coming home, he declared that the Palestinians want to throw
us into the sea. Hearing this, the public threw him out and elected the
tough far-right general, Ariel Sharon, the founder of Likud.
Netanyahu
became Minister of Finance. As such he was quite successful. Applying
the neo-liberal ultra-capitalist teaching he had absorbed in the US, he
made the poor poorer and the rich richer. The poor seemed to liked it.
Sharon
was the father of the settlements in the West Bank. To strengthen
these, he decided to give up the Gaza Strip with its few settlements,
which were a disproportional drag on the army. But his unilateral
retreat from the Gaza Strip shocked the rightist camp. The elder
Netanyahu called the move a "crime against humanity".
Inpatient
with opposition, Sharon split the Likud and founded his own Kadima
("Forwards") party. Netanyahu again became the leader of Likud.
As
usual, he was lucky. Sharon suffered a stroke and fell into a coma,
from which he never recovered. His successor, Ehud Olmert, was accused
of corruption and had to resign. The next in line, Tzipi Livni, was
incompetent and unable to form a government, though all the ingredients
were there.
Netanyahu,
the man who was kicked out just a few years earlier by the cheering
masses, came back as an imperator. Again the masses cheered. Shakespeare
would have loved it.
SINCE
THEN, Netanyahu has been elected again and again. The last time was a
clear personal victory. He vanquished all his competitors on the Right.
So
who is this Netanyahu? Contrary to popular opinion, he is a man of very
strong beliefs – the beliefs of his far-right father. The entire world
is out to kill us at all times, we need a powerful state to defend
ourselves, all of the land between the Mediterranean and the Jordan has
been given us by God (whether he exists or not). Everything else is
lies, subterfuges, tactics.
When,
in a famous speech at Bar-Ilan university near Tel Aviv, Netanyahu
embraced the principle of "Two States for Two Peoples", those who knew
him could only smile. It was as if he had recommended the eating of pork
on Yom Kippur.
He
dangled this statement before the eyes of the naive Americans and let
his Justice Minister, Tzipi Livni, lead endless negotiations with the
Palestinians, whom he despises. Whenever it seemed that the negotiations
were nearing some goal, he quickly put up another condition, such us
the ridiculous demand that the Palestinians recognize Israel as the
Nation State of the Jewish People. He would not dream, of course, of
recognizing the Palestinian territories as the Nation State of the
Palestinian People – a people he does not really believe exists at all.
On
the eve of the last election, just now, Netanyahu announced that there
would not be a Palestinian state as long as he was in power. When the
Americans remonstrated, he repudiated himself. Why not? As his Likud
predecessor, Yitzhak Shamir, famously said, "It is permitted to lie for
the Fatherland."
Netanyahu
will lie, cheat, repudiate himself, raise false flags – all for the
purpose of achieving his one and only real goal, the Rock of our
Existence (as he loves to say), the heritage of his father – the Jewish
State from the sea to the river.
THE TROUBLE is that in this area, the Arabs are already the majority, a small majority, but one that is bound to grow steadily.
A
Jewish and democratic state in the entire country is impossible. The
popular joke has it that this is too much even for God. So He decreed
that we have to choose two of the three attributes: a Jewish and
democratic state in part of the country, a Jewish state in all of the
country that will not be democratic, or a democratic state in all of the
country that will not be Jewish.
Netanyahu's
solution to this problem is to ignore it. Just go on, enlarge the
settlements, and concentrate on the immediate problem: install his
fourth government and plan for his fifth, four years from now.
And,
of course, show his father, who is looking down on him from heaven,
that after all little Bibi, his second son, is worthy of him.
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