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Colin Shindler

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Colin Shindler,

Colin Shindler

Analysis

Rabin assasination, 20th anniversary: Lessons of killing yet to be learnt

October 29, 2015 09:36
Mourners at Rabin’s grave (Picture: Flash90)
2 min read

The assassination of Yitzhak Rabin 20 years ago was a watershed in the collapse of the peace process between Israelis and Palestinians. It also marked the lowest point in the far right's march to power.

The far-right came into existence when, opposing Menachem Begin's support for the 1979 treaty between Israel and Egypt, it broke away from the Prime Minister's broad right-wing coalition and formed its own bloc.

Mr Begin had returned Sinai to Egypt, but many assumed that he would also cede the West Bank to the Palestinians. While this was never Begin's intention, the far right was clearly unable to stomach any whiff of compromise with the Arab world. They accused Mr Begin of heresy after a lifetime of implacable defiance.

In response, Begin and his successor, Yitzhak Shamir, ensured that far-right parties remained on the margins and did not displace the Likud.