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Anshel Pfeffer

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Yaalon may return, but Herzog's sinking

May 26, 2016 10:17
Herzog
1 min read

When Ariel Sharon was forced to resign from the Defence Ministry in February 1983, his friend Uri Dan memorably said: "They didn't want him as defence minister. They'll get him as prime minister." It took 18 years for that prophecy to be fulfilled.

In his resignation speech on Friday, Moshe Yaalon announced he was taking "time out", though he would continue to "challenge for national leadership". Unlike Sharon, he jumped before being pushed, resigning from the Knesset and spurning a belated offer from Benjamin Netanyahu to serve as foreign minister.

If Mr Yaalon indeed intends to remain in public life and return to the political fray then, at least for now, he is the most prominent figure in the growing "anti-Netanyahu" camp within the Israeli centre-right.

He will find, however, that it is a crowded field. The undisputed figurehead of this camp is President Reuven Rivlin, who shares Mr Yaalon's hawkish views on the non-viability of the two-state solution, and also his commitment to what both men see as Israel's under-threat liberal values.