A fresh government will almost certainly bring a more diplomatic foreign minister, but don’t expect a sea change on the Palestinian or Iranian fronts

ed note–as we have predicted here on this website may times, much of the present brouhaha involving Netanyahu is about giving this ugly woman known as the Jewish state a new makeover so as to make her more presentable to a world that has grown tired of her inherently ugly appearance. Netanyahu & co–including Lieberman–are the face of  Judaism, Inc. In their brash, brazen and unapologetically-honest behavior, they reveal Judaism (and its political manifestation, Zionism) for what they truly are without all the black magic and makeup, and unless something drastic is done, the Gentile world will eventually and inevitably wake from its slumber and begin the process of expelling this dangerous virus from its body politic, and in the process, thousands of years of work in writing this malware code and loading it onto the hard drive of human thought and activity will be lost, and this is the reason for the removal of Netanyahu and his associates in Likud and Y’Israel Betenyu.

Times of Israel

A day ahead of Israel’s elections, while nobody can be sure who’ll emerge as prime minister, it’s pretty clear Israel will get a new foreign minister.

Having filled the post since 2009 — albeit with a short hiatus as he fought corruption charges — Avigdor Lieberman, his Yisrael Beytenu party barely clearing the electoral threshold in some polls, is highly unlikely to retain it. Even if a right-wing government comes to power — dominated by Likud, Jewish Home, Yahad, Kulanu and Yisrael Beytenu — other leaders are likely to stake more powerful claims to the post.

Even Lieberman himself, asserting in defiance of all surveys that his party will win 10 or more seats, says he has his eyes on the Defense Ministry.

But who might succeed him in the post? And how might the elections affect Israel’s diplomatic strategies and tactics, and international attitudes to Israel?

Who might replace Lieberman?
With a center-right/far-right coalition, it is more than possible that the Foreign Ministry will remain with Likud. Naftali Bennett’s Jewish Home is projected to win double digit-seats and as the Likud’s senior coalition partner, he could demand any ministerial portfolio. But Bennett, a former junior officer in an elite infantry unit, will likely choose the Defense Ministry.

Moshe Kahlon, whose Kulanu is expected to garner eight or nine seats, has made plain he wants to be finance minister and Benjamin Netanyahu has already promised him that post. Yahad’s Eli Yishai, with a projected four to five seats, would be in no position to demand the Foreign Ministry, and probably wouldn’t want it anyway. (He might push to return to the Interior Ministry.)

This scenario could, therefore, allow Netanyahu to appoint a Likud MK to the helm of Israel’s diplomatic apparatus. Silvan Shalom already served as foreign minister, from 2003 until 2006, and would surely covet a comeback. Gilad Erdan, who mulled leaving the security cabinet last year to become Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, and current Deputy Foreign Minister Tzachi Hanegbi would also eagerly accept the job.

Former ambassador to Washington Michael Oren, of Kulanu, would seem a likely candidate for the post of deputy foreign minister.

By contrast, if Zionist Union head Isaac Herzog manages to establish the next government — with the help of Yesh Atid, Meretz, Kulanu and/or either Shas or Yisrael Beytenu — Yair Lapid would seem a shoe-in for the job of foreign minister. Projected to receive up to 12 seats, Lapid’s centrist party would be the Zionist Camp’s senior coalition partner and he could choose any ministerial position. While Lapid said during the campaign that he’d like to return to the Finance Ministry, it wouldn’t be surprising if he opted for the far more prestigious foreign portfolio, leaving behind the thankless task of financial management.

In another scenario, if Likud invited Zionist Union to serve as its junior partner in a national unity government, the Foreign Ministry position might go to Herzog or Tzipi Livni. If the roles were reversed, and the elections gave Zionist Union the votes to play senior partner in a unity government, Herzog would become prime minister, Netanyahu might step down as Likud leader, and whoever succeeded him could be foreign minister. A Herzog-Netanyahu rotation agreement could also see Livni return to the Foreign Ministry, where she served from 2006 until 2009.

With his outspoken, undiplomatic approach to foreign policy and his unorthodox views regarding the peace process with the Palestinians, Lieberman is no darling of the international community. Thus almost any of the potential candidates to replace him would likely find an enthusiastic welcome in allied capitals.

International responses
However, it is the prime minister more than anybody else who determines the country’s foreign policy, and most governments in Europe, if not all, wish for Netanyahu to be replaced by someone who promises more flexibility on the Palestinian issue.

If Netanyahu were to be reelected and build a right-wing coalition, the European Union is sure to increase pressure on Israel. European diplomats don’t say so on the record, but in private conversations they readily predict that even Jerusalem’s closest friends in the EU — Germany, the Czech Republic and the Netherlands — would be hard pressed to defend Israel against efforts from others in the EU to turn the screws on another Netanyahu government. Even governments usually supportive of Israel will be “empty-handed” in seeking to deflect such pressure if a right-wing government comes into power and prevents any progress on the peace talks, a senior European official told The Times of Israel recently.

If a new right-wing government were perceived to be actively diminishing the prospects of progress toward an Israeli-Palestinian agreement through continued settlement construction, the EU would take concrete measures to make its displeasure felt in Jerusalem, the official said. Certain possible sanctions are already being discussed in Brussels, including the introduction of a special labeling of goods produced in the settlements.

Netanyahu is aware that he’s unpopular outside Israel’s borders. There’s an “enormous campaign here from abroad, enormous, nothing short of that, in an unprecedented way, trying to get out the Arab vote in vast numbers, get out the left vote in vast numbers, and conduct a negative campaign against me on an unprecedented scale,” he told The Times of Israel last week.

In another interview, he cited the opposition of Scandinavian governments to his reelection. And it is no secret that the Obama administration would not be heartbroken if Netanyahu went home after Election Day, especially after his contentious speech to Congress lobbying against the emerging Obama-backed deal with Iran two weeks ago. Asked if he thought the US administration would like to see him ousted, he told The Times of Israel: “Well, it’s not a tremendous leap of imagination, don’t you think?”

What to expect from Washington
If Herzog wins, the Americans are likely to push again for final-status negotiations with the Palestinians. They might even do so if there is a unity government.

Herzog and Livni have said they’re keen on resuming talks and there’s no reason to assume the secretary of state won’t try to get them into a room together with Palestinian Authority.

However, this does not by any means herald the imminent signing of a peace accord. Herzog has avoided so much as uttering the word “peace” throughout the campaign lest he raise unrealistic expectations. Unsure about the PA’s willingness to abandon its unilateral steps at the United Nations and the International Criminal Court, the Labor leader is clearly willing to give negotiations a try, and has spoken of the imperative to dismantle isolated settlements, but he’s also warned that he doesn’t know which Mahmoud Abbas he’d encounter — the PA chief who promises he seeks peaceful co-existence alongside Israel, or the one who denounces Israel for “genocide” in Gaza and seeks a unilateral UN Security Council resolution on statehood.

Rhetorically, at least, Netanyahu and Herzog are both committed to a two-state solution but insist on a united Jerusalem, recognition of Israel’s Jewish nature and control over the Jordan Valley — positions that, when set against Abbas’s declared stances, render a final-status agreement exceedingly unlikely. But while Netanyahu boasts of his ability to “withstand international pressure,” Herzog and Livni’s strategy is based on showing goodwill and readiness for painful compromises.

If Netanyahu stays in power, Washington, busy with an Iran deal, Syria, Ukraine and Cuba, might be less inclined to focus its efforts on Israeli-Palestinian peace, especially if Israel is ruled by a right-wing government without the Zionist Union and Yesh Atid. In the outgoing government, Livni was keen on negotiating with the Palestinians, and Lapid wholeheartedly supported the attempt. If the new government were to include the ultra-Orthodox and Kulanu — Kahlon defines himself as a member of the “national camp” — chances for a resumption of talks are close to zero.

However, even in such a scenario the Americans will not just give up and let Israel maintain the status quo. President Barack Obama might conceivably not veto, or even back, a UN Security Council resolution that would enshrine certain principles in international law, such as the need for a two-state solution based on the 1967 lines with mutually agreed land swaps.

As for the Iranian nuclear program, efforts to thwart it will not be greatly affected by the election’s outcome, as the six world powers currently negotiating with Tehran seem determined to sign a deal if they can. Neither Netanyahu nor Herzog will like the agreement but neither one will be unable to do anything about it — not via diplomacy, at any rate.

0 thoughts on “After Lieberman, imagining Israel’s new face to the world”
  1. “Much of the present brouhaha involving Netanyahu is about giving this ugly woman known as the Jewish state a new makeover so as to make her more presentable to a world that has grown tired of her inherently ugly appearance.

    I’m going to disagree. The way I see it, the Israeli masses want a change because the cost of living has made life unworkable in Israel – and Netanyahu doesn’t care. (Indeed he deliberately caused the economic crisis.) The government provides him with a live-in chef, and yet Netanyahu still spends 96,000 government shekels a year (USD $2,000 a month) on gourmet food delivered from restaurants. Netanyahu and his wife spend 75,400 government shekels (USD $20,000) a month on hairdressers, and on maid service for their private palace.

    The masses see Netanyahu’s wife as a Marie Antoinette. The stories of her beating and berating servants are legion.

    Maybe you remember the “bottle refund” scam. This did not involve a large amount of money, but it was symbolic. Netanyahu and his wife live like royalty at government expense. This includes all manner of drinks delivered to their palace in bottles, again at government expense. Staff members return the bottles for deposit refunds, and the Netanyahus pocket the cash, instead of remitting that money to the government as they should. This is illegal, but Netanyahu was the King.

    Netanyahu’s answer to every scandal and every public complaint is “Iran.” This ploy worked for a while, as did the hate-fest against Palestinians, but now the economic stresses are so great that the Israeli masses aren’t buying it anymore.

    Rich people and bankers pay Netanyahu to impose neo-liberalism on the masses. Always and everywhere, the sole purpose of neo-liberalism and “market reforms” is to widen the gap between the rich and the rest. The 1% become richer than ever, while the 99% fall into poverty.

    (This is a global phenomenon. In Japan, life for average people under the neo-liberal prime Minister Shinzo Abe has become an absolute nightmare. Barak Obama wants to bring this same neo-liberal nightmare to Iran, Cuba, and Venezuela.)

    With neo-liberalism, the government falsely claims that there is “no money” for social programs that help average people. Likewise there is “no money” for affordable housing, or for infrastructure projects that would employ the masses. However there is infinite money for war and for weapons makers (since they pay kick-backs to politicians). And there is infinite money to bail out a big bank when its casino bets go bad. The money is infinite, because the Israeli government creates it out of thin air. And yet, there is “no money” for the masses.

    Netanyahu’s policies have caused housing prices to increase by 55% during the last five years. Rents went up by 30%. The average Israeli must now pay 38% of all his income on rent alone, even in neighborhoods that are far from the city center. And the numbers keep climbing. (Remember that Israel is miserable little place. Jews and the Jewish mind-set control the world, but in Israel itself is a dung heap.)

    Buying a house or a condo is out of the question. Israeli banks require a 25-to-30 percent down payment for a mortgage. A modest three-bedroom condo in the central Jerusalem neighborhood of Nachlaot costs 2 to 3 million shekels (USD $495,000 – $742,000).

    Meanwhile, wages have fallen, and unemployment has skyrocketed. Again, it’s all about widening the gap between the rich and the rest.

    What is Netanyahu’s response to all this?

    “Iran.”

    “The whole world is against me.”

    “Iran.”

    “It’s Obama’s fault.”

    “Iran.”

    “Anti-Semitism in Europe.”

    “Iran.”

    “Foreign powers want to destroy me.”

    “Iran.”

    But it’s not working. Most Israelis are severely overdrawn on their bank accounts, and they must pay huge overdraft fees. If they have any property as collateral, they take out loans from the bank to pay the bank’s overdraft fees, and then they overdraft their accounts again. Eventually they lose everything to the bank.

    This is all by design. It’s all part of neo-liberalism. Bankers and rich people pay their puppet politicians (e.g. Netanyahu) to keep the scam going. In return, the puppet-politicians live in splendor.

    My own estimation is that 80% of Israelis want Netanyahu gone. They want a change. Their attitude is “anyone but Netanyahu.”

    Netanyahu’s over-confidence caused this trouble. Three short months ago, he summarily fired Cabinet ministers he deemed insubordinate, in effect dissolving his coalition and causing tomorrow’s elections to be held two years ahead of schedule.

    Indeed, Netanyahu was so over-confident, and so contemptuous of the masses, that Netanyahu did not order the installation of electronic voting machines until it was too late. (Israel will have machines, but they will not be ready for the election tomorrow.)

    Electronic voting machines allow bankers and rich people to control the vote by “correcting” the machines. Since rich people own the corporate media outlets, they run continual stories that the candidates for office are “neck and neck,” regardless of the actual reality. Therefore, even when the masses vote 80-20 against the bankers’ puppet, the election commission announces that the puppet “won” by a 51-49% margin. And the masses believe it.

    https://quatloosx.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/israel_voting.jpg

    Israel does not (yet) have electronic voting. Even worse, the media outlets have had a “poll blackout” for the last week, meaning they cannot control the masses by announcing every five minutes that “Polls show that….”

    Therefore Netanyahu is now begging smaller right-wing parties (i.e. satellite parties) to “come home” to Likud. (There are 26 parties in the Knesset.) Netanyahu says that if he loses, then Iran and Palestinians will perpetrate another “holocaust.”™

    Likud and the Zionist Union are the two largest among 26 political parties contesting the election, and it is not possible for either one to achieve a majority in the 120-seat Knesset. Therefore PM candidates must woo coalition partners, a process which can take weeks to yield a result. In 2013, Livni’s Kadima party bested Netanyahu’s Likud party by a single seat, but she was unable to muster enough support for a workable coalition. Netanyahu was able to.

    WHAT DOES ALL THIS MEAN FOR PALESTINIANS?

    Nothing. All Jews hate all Goyim. Period.

    (And almost all Goyim adore the Jews that despise them.)

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