King Bibi
By Uri Avnery
December 12, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - BINYAMIN NETANYAHU
is our prime minister for life.
So it seems. So he evidently believes.
Not only believes. He acts accordingly. To make
sure, he has done the two necessary things: (a) eliminate every
possible competitor, and (b) surround himself with male and female
nincompoops, no one of whom could be considered by anyone a
plausible successor. Indeed, the idea that any of this lot could
ever become prime minister sends shudders down our spines.
So we are stuck with him for life (at least). Time
to face this prospect.
HE IS not the worst. No one ever is. For every bad
leader, there is a worse one. (Except Adolf Hitler, perhaps.)
So let us look first at the positive sides of his
rule. There are some. (Yes, indeed.)
No. 1: He is not crazy.
Around the world there are several crazy leaders.
We have quite a number of crazies in and out of government.
Netanyahu is not one of them.
No. 2: He is not irresponsible.
During the last Gaza war, when all kinds of
politicians and other demagogues called for him to do all kinds of
irresponsible things, such as re-conquering the Gaza Strip, he
refused and followed the advice of the army.
(In Israel, for the time being, the army abhors
senseless adventures. The top army officers are, as a rule, much
less reckless than the politicians.)
One can ask, of course, how we got into this
quagmire in the first place. In fact, Netanyahu fits the old
definition: A clever person is somebody who knows how to get out of
a bad situation which a wise person would never have got into in the
first place.
No. 3: He is an effective orator.
That is not a necessary requirement, of course.
David Ben-Gurion was a poor speaker, Levi Eshkol was a lousy one.
Both were Demosthenes-like compared to Golda Meir, whose vocabulary
in Hebrew and English consisted of about a hundred words, badly
accented. That was enough for her to convince any audience.
Netanyahu is an accomplished speaker in the
opposite sense. He speaks a good Hebrew, he has a baritone voice,
his gestures are appropriate. Indeed, one often gets the impression
that he has spent hours in front of a mirror to get the delivery
exactly right.
Yet he convinces only those who want to be
convinced. For discerning listeners, the whole performance is too
studied, too perfect. Like his hair, too slick, too perfectly hued
white-blue.
(It was disclosed recently that his personal
hair-stylist, on the government payroll, earns more than a cabinet
minister. Rightly so, I think.)
When Netanyahu speaks to the world as the
representative of Israel, he delivers a credible performance. Not
brilliant, not very convincing, perhaps, but not shameful either.
MANY PEOPLE, both in Israel and outside, believe
that Netanyahu is a total cynic, a man without real convictions,
whose only aim is to stay in power forever.
I don't believe that is true.
A cynic without convictions would be far less
dangerous. But Netanyahu is not a cynic.
He grew up in the shadow of his father, Ben-Zion,
a bitter family tyrant, who was convinced that he did not receive
the respect due to him from his academic colleagues and institutions
because of his political convictions. Because of this he emigrated
temporarily to the US, where Binyamin grew up as an all-American
boy.
The father was an ardent extreme rightist. The
leader of the Zionist right, the brilliant Vladimir (Ze'ev)
Jabotinsky, was far too moderate for him. Ben-Zion specialized in
the history of the Spanish inquisition and wrote a weighty work on
it, but his colleagues did not accord him the honors that were he
believed - his due. He became very bitter.
Binyamin adored his father and considered him a
genius, but the father admired his elder son, Yoni, a military
officer who fell in the famous Entebbe raid. Of "Bibi" the father
had a rather low opinion. He once said publicly that Binyamin could
make a reasonable foreign minister, but not a prime minister. In
Israel, the foreign office is treated with some disdain. A real
he-man aspires to become defense minister.
All this instilled in the young Binyamin a burning
ambition to show his dead father that he could indeed make an
excellent prime minister. It also formed the ideological base of all
his thoughts and actions: the unshakable conviction that the Jews
must take possession of "the whole of Eretz Israel" the entire
land between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan river.
Every word Netanyahu has ever said that
contradicts this basic conviction is a blatant lie. But, as the
ancient Romans should have said: "Sweet and fitting it is to lie for
the fatherland."
WITHIN THIS boundaries, Netanyahu is indeed a
cynic. He clings to power, and has no inclination whatsoever to ever
give it up.
And, indeed, he is a consummate politician. There
is no sign that he respects any of the people he appointed
ministers. He seems to have taken a delight in appointing each of
them to the job most inappropriate for him or her. The Culture
Minister, Miri Regev, a vulgar, primitive, quite uncultured female
politician is a supreme example, but most of her colleagues are not
much better suited to their jobs.
None of these can endanger his position in the
least. Compared to them, he is a towering figure.
In the other parties, inside the government
coalition and outside, the situation is not much better. Some of
them showed some promise (at least in the polls) but this proved to
be short-lived. Moshe Kahlon, the present finance minister, is a
nice fellow, but as a national leader he is knee-high. So is Ya'ir
Lapid, the former finance minister now in opposition, who firmly
believes that fate has chosen him as Netanyahu's successor. His only
problem is that few others share this belief.
Much more ominously, the Labor Party (now "Zionist
Camp") is devoid of any personality who could come even near to
Netanyahu's leadership stature. The party leader, Yitzhak Herzog, is
a sad disappointment.
Almost all the party functionaries avoid even
mentioning the salient national issue: the occupation. They hardly
ever utter the dangerous five-letter word: PEACE. Much better to
talk about a "political arrangement", "final settlement" and such.
Blah-blah-blah.
NETANYAHU'S MAIN instrument of rule goes back to
ancient Rome (as befits the son of a historian): Divide et Impera.
He is a consummate hate-monger. Jews against
Arabs, Oriental Jews against Ashkenazis, religious ones against the
secular. (He himself is a non-believer, but the religious of all
stripes are his strongest allies.)
Hatred goes with fear. It is an ancient Jewish
belief that the whole world is out to destroy us ("but God saves us
from their hands", as every Jew declaims on Passover eve). True now
more than ever.
The Iranians are out to get us. The Arabs want to
wipe us out. The Leftists are worse: they are traitors. It is Bibi,
the Only One, who saves us from all of them. God may help a bit.
BUT THE real danger of Netanyahu's reign is his
total lack of an answer to Israel's main problem, its existential
question: the 130-year war with the Palestinians, and by extension
with the entire Arab and perhaps Muslim world. Bound by his father's
ideology, he is unable even to contemplate giving up an inch of our
holy fatherland. (Like many Israelis he does not believe in God, but
believes that God has promised us this land. Actually, God was even
more generous and promised us all the land between the Nile and the
Euphrates.) Some Bantustan-like disconnected enclaves for the
Palestinians why not, as long as we cannot drive them out
altogether. But not more. This prevents any effort for peace. It
guarantees an apartheid state or a bi-national state with a
permanent civil war. Netanyahu knows that very well. He has no
illusions. So he has uttered the logical answer: "We shall live
forever by the sword". Good Hebrew, terrible statesmanship. Under
his rule, Israel will irrevocably slide down the slope towards
eventual disaster. The longer his reign, the greater the danger. All
in all, Netanyahu is a man without intellectual depths, a political
manipulator without real solutions, a man with an imposing front but
empty inside. In the meantime, he is great at inventing issues that
divert attention from the fateful problem. All of Israel has been
consumed for months with the debate about the "natural gas plan"
the way of dividing the profits from the natural gas reservoirs
discovered in the sea near the shores of Israel. Netanyahu supports
with all his might the "plan" that pours the riches into the pockets
of a handful of tycoons connected somehow with Sheldon Adelson, his
protector (and, some say, his owner).
IN THE meantime, King Bibi" and his highly
unpopular royal consort, Queen Sarah'le, can look about with
satisfaction. There is no one around who could endanger their
unlimited reign ("term of office" seems an inappropriate
definition.)
They think about building a royal (sorry, prime
ministerial) palace instead of the rather shabby present residence
in the center of Jerusalem. All around them there is nothing but a
political desert.
I would pray to God to deliver us.
But unfortunately, I don't believe in Him.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and founder of
the Gush Shalom peace movement. A member of the Irgun as a teenager,
Avnery sat in the Knesset from 1965 to 1974 and from 1979 to 1981.