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Jonathan Freedland

ByJonathan Freedland, JonathanFreedland

Opinion

Here’s hoping we see the back of Bibi at last

There was a moment last week when Jonathan Freedland thought a shake up in Israeli leadership might be on the cards. Not so, he unfortunately muses...

January 14, 2019 12:17
Netanyahu
3 min read

For a few hours last Monday afternoon, there was an unfamiliar buzz of excitement pulsing around the online community of Israel-watchers. Binyamin Netanyahu had alerted the TV networks that he would make a “dramatic announcement” at 8pm local time. Was there to be some new diplomatic initiative? A new alignment of the parties of the right perhaps, some masterstroke by Bibi ahead of Israeli elections on April 9? Or, finally and least likely, could it be that the corruption probes and threat of indictment long hanging over the prime minister had reached a tipping point and — whisper it— he was going to resign?

None of the above. Instead, Bibi served up what the Americans call a nothingburger. His live TV address was devoted to a complaint about legal procedure in the investigations against him. It was so boring, and so self-serving, that Israel’s Channel 10 cut transmission and showed something else instead.

But for a few, sweet moments we were allowed to dream. For an hour or two we could fantasise about the exit from Israeli politics of a man who first sat in the prime minister’s chair in 1996 — nearly a quarter century ago. You now have to be in middle age to remember an Israel that was not dominated by the looming figure of Bibi Netanyahu. Indeed, one explanation of his continuing supremacy is that Israelis cannot even imagine someone else in the top job.

There was a time, the best part of two decades ago, when I would approach an Israeli election with something like hope. Perhaps the peace camp, broadly defined, was about to win power and, at long last, begin the process that I believed — and still believe — was necessary for the country’s survival: namely the partition of the land into two states, one for Israelis and one for Palestinians, living side by side. I’d seen something like it happen with the victory of Yitzhak Rabin in 1992 and of Ehud Barak in 1999, so it didn’t seem absurd to think it might happen again. But in the 21st century, reality has brought a string of defeats, especially following the slow disintegration of Kadima, the vehicle constructed by Ariel Sharon and Ehud Olmert to pursue some form of territorial compromise.