Why I Hope Israel’s
Elections Will Give Netanyahu a Fourth Term
as Prime Minister
Netanyahu is a disaster for Zionism so let's
have more of him.
By Alan Har
March 15, 2015 "ICH"
- If I had to express my hope in one
sentence it would be this. A fourth term as
prime minister for Netanyahu would see
Israel becoming more and more isolated and
could improve the chances of Western
governments being moved to use the leverage
they have to cause the Zionist (not Jewish)
state to end its defiance of international
law and denial of the Palestinian claim for
justice.Another way
to put it would be to say Netanyahu is a
disaster for Zionism so let’s have more of
him.
A vision of the disaster
Netanyahu’s leadership has been bringing on
was put into words by former Mossad chief
Meir Dagan when he addressed the
anti-Netanyahu “Israel Wants Change” rally
in Rabin Square on 7 March. He said:
Israel is surrounded
by enemies. Enemies do not scare me; I
worry about our leadership. I am afraid
of our leadership… Netanyahu is dragging
us down to a bi-national state and to
the end of the Zionist dream.
It would not surprise me
if Netanyahu’s unspoken and unspeakable
response was something like, “That will not
happen because we’ll resort to a final round
of ethnic cleansing before it could happen.”
In my imagination
Netanyahu shared his thoughts on how to
defuse the demographic time-bomb of
occupation with a group of deluded,
neo-fascist Jewish settlers. One of them
said, “Yes, and while we’re completing our
ethnic cleansing programme we’ll blow up the
Dome of the Rock.” Another said, “And we’ll
chop off some Palestinian heads as Lieberman
suggested.”
What Israeli foreign
minister Avigdor Lieberman actually said
when as leader of the right-wing Yisrael
Beiteinu party he addressed an election
rally in Herzliya on 8 March was the
following.
Whoever is with us
should give everything as they wish.
Whoever is against us, there’s nothing
else to do. We have to lift up an axe
and remove his head, otherwise we won’t
survive here.
The question those words
provoked in my mind was this.
If Israel continues on its
present course will the future see the
emergence of a Zionist equivalent of ISIS?
Because a two-state
solution in the shape and form the
Palestinians could accept has long been
dead, killed by Israel’s colonization of the
occupied West Bank, an enterprise best
described as on-going ethnic cleansing
slowly and by stealth, a bi-national state
is the only hope for a political resolution
of the conflict.
The creation of a
bi-national state would put under one
territorial roof the land of Israel prior to
the 1967 war, the occupied West Bank and the
besieged Gaza Strip.
In theory and principle a
real and true by-national state would be one
in which ALL of its citizens enjoyed equal
political and all other civil and human
rights.
Because the day is
approaching when the Arabs of
Israel-Palestine will outnumber the Jews,
the creation of a bi-national state would
therefore lead the de-Zionization of
Palestine and, to quote to Meir Dagan again,
“the end of the Zionist dream”.
Question: If Netanyahu
stays in power, and given that he is not
remotely interested in peace on terms the
Palestinians could accept whether in two
states or one, what are his options for
defusing the demographic time-bomb of
occupation and keeping Zionism alive?
The strategy he has been
working on for many months is to have
Mohammed Dahlan, the former Fatah leader in
Gaza, replace Mahmoud Abbas as president of
the Palestinian Authority
In Gaza Dahlan plotted with Israel and its
American protector to destroy Hamas. But
things didn’t go as planned. Hamas became
aware of the Israeli and American backed
Dahlan coup in-the-making and launched a
pre-emptive strike to drive Fatah’s forces
out of the Gaza Strip.
Then, in June 2011, Dahlan
was expelled from Fatah because of the
widespread belief, given voice by Abbas,
that he, Dahlan, was the one who did
Mossad’s bidding and administered the
polonium that killed Arafat.
Three months later,
fearing that Dahlan was plotting against
him, Abbas ordered the Palestinian police to
raid his home and arrest his private armed
guards. (No doubt some of them were Israeli
assets).
In the past year or so, in
regular contact with one or two of
Netanyahu’s most trusted aides, Dahlan has
been planning his comeback and is seeking to
replace Abbas as president of the PA.
What does Netanyahu think Dahlan could do
for Zionism?
My guess is that be
believes President Dahlan would be prepared
to use force to compel the Palestinians to
accept whatever crumbs they were offered
from Zionism’s table – a few Bantustans here
and there which they could call a state if
they wished.
Though such a scenario
might play well in Netanyahu’s warped mind,
it is totally divorced from reality (par for
his course). There is no power on earth or
anywhere else that could force the occupied
and oppressed Palestinians to surrender to
Zionism’s will. Their incredible almost
superhuman steadfastness for the past 67
years says so.
It follows that if the
elections about to take place give him the
opportunity to cobble together a new
coalition to enable him to continue in
office as prime minister, Netanyahu will
have to come up with another way of defusing
the demographic time-bomb of occupation and
the real threat it poses to the existence of
the Zionist state.
On the basis of his
performance in recent weeks I think it’s not
unreasonable to speculate that Netanyahu
would begin a fourth term as prime minister
by entertaining the hope that the creeping
transformation of anti-Israelism into
anti-Semitism will gather momentum and cause
more and more European Jews to flee to
Israel.
In my view that’s most
unlikely to happen on the scale that would
be necessary to defuse the demographic
time-bomb of occupation, and that would
leave Zionism with only one option – a final
round of ethnic cleansing.
A pretext for it could
easily be created by half a dozen Israeli
agents dressing up as Palestinian terrorists
and killing 30 or 40 or more Jews in what
would be a bog standard false flag
operation. In response Israel’s military
might would be fully mobilized to drive the
Palestinians off the occupied West Bank.
Those who didn’t flee to Jordan, Syria,
Lebanon or wherever would be killed.
Butchered. And if Lieberman’s wish was
granted, some would be beheaded.
Question: If the Zionist
Union coalition wins more Knesset seats than
Netanyahu’s ruling Likud Party (the polls
suggest that it will), and IF (it is a big
if) its leader Isaac Herzog could then put
together a majority that would enable him to
replace Netanyahu as prime minister, would
that improve the prospects for peace on
terms that would provide the Palestinians
with an acceptable amount of justice?
Despite the fact that I
believe Herzog really meant what he said
when he declared that it was “not too late
for peace” and that (unlike Netanyahu) he
would put real effort into getting a real
peace process going, my answer is NO. The
truth is that Herzog as prime minister would
not be allowed by Israel’s right wing in all
of its manifestations to deliver enough in
the way of withdrawal from occupation to
satisfy the Palestinians’ minimum demands
and needs.
So, I say, defeat for
Netanyahu and victory for Herzog would
result in an injection of false and phoney
optimism into the international politics of
the conflict. We would have President Obama,
Prime Minister Cameron and others telling us
that a new page had been turned and that the
door to peace was now open.
And that would be nonsense.
If there is ever to be a
real peace process it has to start with the
governments of the major powers, led by the
one in Washington DC, putting Israel on
notice that if it does not end its defiance
of international law and continues its
occupation and colonization of the West Bank
it will be isolated and sanctioned.
In my view the prospects
of governments being prepared to use the
leverage they have to try to cause Israel to
be serious about peace on the basis of
justice for the Palestinians and security
for all would be significantly improved if
Netanyahu remains in power.
Another way of putting it
would be to say that Netanyahu, unbalanced
if not clinically mad, is, actually, the
best public relations man for the
Palestinians and their cause!
The latest and the last of
the pre-election polls conducted in Israel
indicate that Herzog’s Zionist Union will
win four more seats in the Knesset than
Netanyahu’s currently ruling Likud party,
but… According to The Times of Israel all of
Israel’s analysts are of the view that
Netanyahu is almost certain to be more
successful than Herzog in putting together a
new ruling coalition.
Also worth noting is that
of the 1230 Israelis polled, 43% said they
wanted Netanyahu to remain as prime minster
and 35% preferred Herzog.
Because of Israel’s
proportional and very bizarre election
system – it enables parties with only three
or four seats to make or break governments
and therefore gives them enormous bargaining
power – the haggling to determine who will
be Israel’s next prime minister will
probably go on for weeks. My guess is that
Herzog will be unable to put together a big
enough coalition to give him a majority in
the Knesset and that Netanyahu will get a
fourth term as prime minister.
For the reasons stated
above I hope I am right.
Footnote
When I was thinking about
the political haggling that will follow
Israel’s elections to determine who will be
prime minister, I recalled a comment made to
me many years ago by a very dear Jewish
friend. He said, “If two Jews were stranded
on an uninhabited desert island there would
three synagogues!”
Alan Hart is a former ITN
and BBC Panorama foreign correspondent who
has covered wars and conflicts wherever they
were taking place in the world and
specialized in the Middle East. His Latest
book
Zionism: The Real Enemy of the Jews, Vol. 1:
The False Messiah, is a three-volume
epic in its American edition. He blogs on
AlanHart.com.