Here's a quick first take on Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's unity deal with Kadima leader Shaul Mofaz.
I
don't think that this move was either motivated by or will impact
Netanyahu's decisions regarding Iran's nuclear weapons program. If the
elections had been carried out in September, as we thought, Netanyahu
would certainly have been reelected. Obama, concerned about his foreign
policy bona fides and the Jewish vote on the eve of his reelection bid,
would have been unable to undermine Netanyahu on Iran or just about
anything else. So from Netanyahu's perspective, a September election
date immunized him from White House pressure.
True, Mofaz has been parroting former Mossad chief Meir Dagan's
attacks on Netanyahu, but no one really cares too much about the
criticisms. This is particularly true because Dagan, et. al. actually
share Netanyahu's assessment of the Iranian threat. They just don't want
him to be the man dealing with it because they hate him personally.
They
know, and Mofaz knows, and Obama knows that the Israeli public will
rally around Netanyahu in the event he orders an attack. So widening the
coalition would only impact his decision on Iran at the margins, if at
all. I suppose from the perspective of optics, it is nice to go into
such a mission with a massive coalition standing with you.
Some
on the right have voiced concerns that Netanyahu wants this coalition
so he can reinstate negotiations with the Palestinians and withdraw from
Judea and Samaria. Maybe. But it's hard for me to believe that
Netanyahu will want to go full speed ahead with that. What would he
stand to gain? Moreover, the Palestinians are the ones who ended the
talks, not Netanyahu. And with Islamists rising to power throughout the
Arab world and in Egypt particularly, Mahmoud Abbas has no incentive to
return to negotiations.
Aside from that, it is
possible that Netanyahu will use the cover he gets from Kadima to
destroy homes in Beit El along the lines that the Supreme Court has
ordered by July. But he probably would have done it anyway -- or not. It
all depends on what he thinks he can get away with. If he decides not
to destroy them, it will be easier for him to stand up the Supreme
Court, whose decision doesn't pass the laugh test, with a coalition of
94 than with a coalition of 66. And it will be easier for him to bow to
the decision of the Supreme Court with a coalition of 94 than a
coalition of 66.
Here it is important to note
that to a large extent, Netanyahu has built his present power on his
refusal to commit seriously to any binding position on the Palestinians.
I don't see him sacrificing this winning policy any time soon by
following in Ariel Sharon's footsteps and betraying his political camp
and ideology completely.
I think the unity deal
is an example of a situation in which Netanyahu was presented with an
offer he'd be an idiot to refuse. In return for essentially nothing, he
built himself the strongest and largest coalition Israel has ever seen.
He gave Mofaz nothing but breathing space for a year. Mofaz didn't even
get a governing portfolio. And in exchange Netanyahu received
unprecedented power and political stability for more than a year.
Kadima
was set to lose half its seats in the Knesset in the next election. It
may still lose half its seats in the next election. It may split apart. A
million things can happen. But Mofaz probably figures that whereas if
the elections were held in September he'd be blamed for the loss, by
October 2013, he will have figured out someone else to blame for the
defeat of his party.
Finally, there is an
economic aspect to this decision. By bringing Kadima into his coalition,
Netanyahu effectively ensured that his free market economic policies
will be maintained and the socialist voices in Israeli politics will be
marginalized for the next year or so. With France going socialist,
Israel's Left, led by Labor Party leader and Marxist Shelly Yahimovich
would have had more resonance in the public for its statist, deficit
spending economic platform. Now Netanyahu got another year during which
the public will see what those policies are doing to Europe and so make
his economic arguments for him.
All in all
this is a great day for Netanyahu. I hope that I am right that he won't
use his new strength to destroy his political party as Sharon did before
him. I don't see any previous action on his part that lends to that
conclusion. But certainly the public, and particularly the Likud members
who are in politics to represent and advance their values and not just
to gain power for power's sake need to think carefully about their
strengths and weaknesses. They need to base their actions over the next
year on a strategy that maximizes the former and minimizes the latter
understanding all the time that they are dealing with an incredibly
powerful party leader.
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