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'Bibi' Review: The Warrior Netanyahu

  
Via:  Vic Eldred  •  2 years ago  •  27 comments

By:   WSJ

'Bibi' Review: The Warrior Netanyahu
In his memoir, Israel's longest-serving prime minister puts the focus on his determination to fight for himself and his country.

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Benjamin Netanyahu is the most successful politician in Israeli history. If Israel's founding father, David Ben-Gurion, defined the Jewish state's birth and early years, Mr. Netanyahu has redefined Israel in its maturation. He has spent more time as prime minister than Ben-Gurion did, and he isn't finished. In November's elections, his Likud Party came out on top. He is now forming the coalition that will inaugurate his third premiership. His memoir, "Bibi," is as polished, argumentative and fascinating as its author, a restless work in progress whose story is that of modern Israel.

"Bibi" begins with a bang. In 1972 Palestinian terrorists hijacked a Sabena airliner and flew it to Lod Airport near Tel Aviv. Mr. Netanyahu, then 22 years old, was serving in the Sayeret Matkal special-forces unit. He and his comrades disguised themselves as ground crew, burst into the plane, and killed and captured the hijackers. Mr. Netanyahu was shot in the arm. The existential stakes, and the implicit contrast with the soft-handed civilians who lead the Western democracies, could not be clearer.

He always knew he was right. His father, the historian Benzion Netanyahu, was secretary to Vladimir Jabotinsky, the ideologue of Zionism’s right-wing Revisionist school. The early Israeli state was a socialist monopoly. The exclusion of Revisionists drove four of Benzion’s brothers into a lush exile in America. Benzion’s family also sojourned there while he researched his books. By the time Bibi entered politics in 1988, he had spent nearly half of his 38 years in America. He is the most American of Israeli prime ministers, except when he is not.

Mr. Netanyahu’s historic mission, the survival of the Jewish people, is deeply personal. His older brother Yoni was his hero, the living image of a sabra, the new, fighting Israeli Jew. Yoni was killed leading the Entebbe hostage rescue in 1976 and became a national icon. Mr. Netanyahu was at MIT when he heard. He is unusually candid about his brother’s loss. “If there was a moment in my life worse than hearing about Yoni’s death,” he writes, “it was telling my parents about it.”

Readers of the Hebrew Bible’s sequel might recognize the story of the Prodigal Son in Mr. Netanyahu’s early adulthood. After earning a master’s degree from MIT’s Sloan School in 1976, he worked at the Boston Consulting Group and then for his family’s anti-terrorism foundation, the Jonathan Institute. In 1982 he was working for RIM, an Israeli furniture manufacturer, when Moshe Arens, a Revisionist connection, asked him to join him at Israel’s Washington embassy as a deputy. A senior left-wing columnist mocked Mr. Netanyahu as a “furniture salesman.” It marked, he says, the beginning of an “obsessive campaign” that would escalate as “the press failed to block my many victories in democratic elections” and would lead to ceaseless scandals on such matters of national import as his wife’s expenditure on dry cleaning.

Mr. Netanyahu’s American education taught him the merits of free-market economics and technology, which would be key to liberalizing Israel’s economy and transforming the state from avocado exporter to high-tech power. Two years in the embassy, and four years as Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, trained him in public relations, and showed him how to update Jabotinsky’s “Theory of Public Pressure” for the age of cable news. Heads of state, Mr. Netanyahu writes, can be persuaded by appeals to “their national interests.” But the “most potent influence” on democratic governments, Jabotinsky wrote in 1929, is “the pressure of public opinion.”

In 1988 Mr. Netanyahu entered the Knesset with Likud and joined the government, first as Moshe Arens’s deputy in the foreign ministry, and then as deputy minister in the office of the prime minister, Yitzhak Shamir. After the Labor Party won the 1992 elections, Mr. Netanyahu became Likud’s leader. When the Labor prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, gambled Israel’s security by embracing the “peace process” with the Palestinians, Mr. Netanyahu led the strident campaign against Rabin and the Oslo Accords. In November 1995, Rabin was murdered by an ultranationalist Israeli Jew.





Mr. Netanyahu strives to dismantle the “scandalous” accusation that he fomented Rabin’s assassination. He became prime minister for the first time in 1996 despite the “outrageous and systematic interference” of the Clinton administration on Labor’s behalf. Mr. Clinton, he writes, was “totally in the grip of the Palestinian Centrality Theory,” the notion that Israeli-Palestinian peace was the key to regional peace. His grudging concessions to Mr. Clinton’s pressure spelled the end of his governing coalition, and he lost the 1999 elections to Ehud Barak, his old commander in Sayeret Matkal. Messrs. Clinton and Barak pursued the mirage of peace with Yasser Arafat until it blew up in a wave of suicide bombings. It is, Mr. Netanyahu writes, now entirely “clear who got it right and who got it wrong.”





When Ariel Sharon returned Likud to power in 2003, Mr. Netanyahu became finance minister. His market and banking reforms helped Israel become “fully integrated into the first-world economy.” By 2019 Israel’s GDP per capita outstripped those of Britain, France and Japan. Mr. Netanyahu also engaged in a “deliberate strategy” of diplomatic outreach, outflanking the Palestinians and the Arab boycott by trading Israel’s military and security know-how for deals and recognition. The result, he writes, was a “quantum leap in Israel’s power” and strategic leverage. The Obama administration tested it, and Mr. Netanyahu’s powers of persuasion, to the limit.

After the 2009 elections returned Mr. Netanyahu to the prime minister’s office, he assembled a centrist coalition and endorsed a demilitarized Palestinian state. This only encouraged the Obama administration’s pressure. Mr. Obama, he writes, saw Israeli Jews as “neocolonials.” The president acted in “bad faith” by not keeping his end of the deal after Mr. Netanyahu imposed a settlement freeze. He gave the Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas a “secret commitment” to establish “a full-fledged Palestinian state before he left office.” He promised to contain Iran’s nuclear program, but in reality took a “soft line” that empowered a state committed to Israel’s destruction.

Mr. Netanyahu does not specify the “offensive” language that Mr. Obama used in a private attempt to intimidate him, though he does say that it was “out of character” and “shocked me deeply.” Mr. Obama was publicly insulted when Mr. Netanyahu, in a last-ditch attempt to block the Iran Deal, accepted a Republican invitation to address the U.S. Congress. Mr. Netanyahu insists that he was right to do it, because Israel’s existence was on the line, but this Jabotinskyite play failed, and the diplomatic fallout with the Democrats continues. The story of the Obama years is so bitter that the only light relief comes when John Kerry tells Mr. Netanyahu to outsource Israel’s security to an American-trained Palestinian militia, and suggests a “clandestine visit” to Afghanistan to see “what a great job we did there to prepare the Afghan army to take over the country once we leave.”

President Trump’s team also subscribed to the Palestinian Centrality Theory, but Mr. Trump had none of Mr. Obama’s “vindictive zeal,” and his “inherent irreverence” made him open to an “entirely new approach.” The Abraham Accords, an Israeli-Arab alliance against the Iranian threat, upended the failed logic of the peace processors. This was a total repudiation of the previous administrations’ approaches, the second Bush presidency among them, and a vindication for Mr. Netanyahu. The climactic chapters of his extraordinary career, in which a lame-duck Biden administration confronts a hard-right Netanyahu coalition while the futures of both Israel and Iran hang in the balance, will make no less compelling reading.





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Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Vic Eldred    2 years ago

A book from the man who arguably is most responsible for Israel's security & economic developement. I think it is worth reading simply to find out what Obama tried to do to our closest ally.



The Book is:

Bibi: My Story

By Benjamin Netanyahu

Threshold Editions

736 pages

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1.1  JohnRussell  replied to  Vic Eldred @1    2 years ago
I think it is worth reading simply to find out what Obama tried to do to our closest ally.

Netanyahu is a right winger. Of course he will have nothing good to say about Obama.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  JohnRussell @1.1    2 years ago

We already know a good deal about what Obama did. He even tried to interfere in Israeli elections.




And for the record: Obama was a leftist who deeply resented the US.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
2  JBB    2 years ago

I saw Bibi on MTP Sunday. He is as obnoxious as Donald Trump.

And that, is deplorable. Netanyahu is a danger to world peace...

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  JBB @2    2 years ago

The danger to world peace is clearly Obama's & Biden's friends: The Iranians.  Obama helped them enter the nuclear club.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.2  JohnRussell  replied to  JBB @2    2 years ago

Bibi wanted to talk about his book but the interviewer kept interrupting him with questions. 

Netanyahu stays in power because the right is strong in Israel. 

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.3  George  replied to  JBB @2    2 years ago

One you talk about deplorable, Chuck Todd immediately comes to mind, I didn't realize that MTP still had enough audience to stay on TV with that hack. Isn't he consistently last behind ABC and CBS?

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.3.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  George @2.3    2 years ago
I didn't realize that MTP still had enough audience to stay on TV with that hack.

Evidently there are at least 2 that still watch!

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.3.2  George  replied to  Vic Eldred @2.3.1    2 years ago

Consistently? I'm sure Chucks wife can find a better way to spend her Sunday mornings.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.3.3  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  George @2.3.2    2 years ago

That would make 3.


As for Todd:

 
 
 
George
Junior Expert
2.3.4  George  replied to  Vic Eldred @2.3.3    2 years ago

Isn’t shoddy journalism his shtick? He can’t really believe what he says, I thought MTP was just a bad leftest version of the Colbert report.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.3.5  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  George @2.3.4    2 years ago

I think he once told his viewers that it was more important to influence opinion than to report news

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
2.4  Greg Jones  replied to  JBB @2    2 years ago
"Netanyahu is a danger to world peace."

And Hamas and the PLO are not?   jrSmiley_78_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
2.4.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Greg Jones @2.4    2 years ago

You're asking the right questions, but it looks like we aren't going to get many answers today!

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
3  JohnRussell    2 years ago

I wonder what type of person will read all 736 pages of this book ? 

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
3.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  JohnRussell @3    2 years ago

As someone famous once said:  "You need to read more."

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
4  JohnRussell    2 years ago

These days I listen to books, which I do a little every day. I have good text to speech apps and can listen to thousands of books from Scribd and other sources. 

If you pay me, I will listen to the audio of Netanyahu's book for a few minutes too. 

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
4.1  Ender  replied to  JohnRussell @4    2 years ago

Couldn't even pay me. Can't stand him.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
4.1.1  Greg Jones  replied to  Ender @4.1    2 years ago

Are you implying that you support the Palestinians?

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
4.1.2  Ender  replied to  Greg Jones @4.1.1    2 years ago

Are you implying that you hate Palestinians?

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
4.1.3  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Ender @4.1.2    2 years ago

Oh hate?

You may not believe this but we have some who hate Cubans.

BTW, you kind of answered Greg's question.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
4.1.4  Greg Jones  replied to  Vic Eldred @4.1.3    2 years ago

He didn't deny it!

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
4.1.5  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Greg Jones @4.1.4    2 years ago

Lol....I know it. Where did they all go?

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
4.1.6  Ender  replied to  Vic Eldred @4.1.3    2 years ago

I guess I can pull what you all do....Don't put words in my mouth...

He also didn't answer mine.

Ahh, nothing like people playing stupid games on a Monday morning.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
4.1.7  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  Ender @4.1.6    2 years ago
I guess I can pull what you all do.

You're being modest. You've done more than that.


Ahh, nothing like people playing stupid games on a Monday morning.

You mean like being in invisible mode?

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
4.1.8  Ender  replied to  Vic Eldred @4.1.7    2 years ago

Whatever invisible mode is....

And yes I have done more than that. You should know as I have told you exactly what I think.

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
5  seeder  Vic Eldred    2 years ago

The only book you require should have been taught to you in high school. All I'll say is that it was the final work of a fine writer, who was dying of tuberculosis.

 
 

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