Post by Paddy by Grace on Feb 7, 2009 20:12:32 GMT -7
news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090207/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_decides;_ylt=AskYvTqb8kiRXiWZY5EPoFkLewgF
JERUSALEM – Israel seems to be moving rightward going into Tuesday's national election, with polls giving the edge to former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a tough stance on Mideast peacemaking that could lead to a collision with the new U.S. administration.
Israel's complex coalition system and a large number of undecided voters could still allow Netanyahu's moderate rival, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, to squeeze out a victory.
But the war in Gaza, a looming recession and a pervasive belief that giving up land only draws more attacks have boosted Netanyahu and other hard-line candidates as Israelis prepare to choose a new 120-member parliament.
"How do I explain Israel's turn to the right?" asks analyst Reuven Hazan. "In three words: Hezbollah, Hamas and Iran."
The 23 days of fighting in the Gaza Strip last month appear to have nourished Israel's self image as a besieged nation surrounded by enemies — even though moderate candidates like Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak can claim political points for having helped wage the popular war. Both those candidates favor evacuating territory to make room for a Palestinian state.
But of all the contenders for prime minister, Netanyahu seems to best channel the current mood. The polished, baritone-voiced politician with flawless English sees confronting threats as the No. 1 priority rather than chasing an elusive peace deal with the Palestinians.
"Last time I voted for Barak and we tried to be nice to the Arabs and you see what we got," 37-year-old Jerusalem resident Elan Benaroush said, referring to the rocket attacks and Hamas takeover of Gaza that followed Israel's 2005 withdrawal from the territory. "We have to be strong. It's a security vote."
Opinion polls indicate that right-leaning parties together may garner a majority of about 65 seats in the next parliament, the Knesset.
But surveys also say the lead of Netanyahu's Likud Party over Livni's centrist Kadima Party has narrowed, with an edge of just two or three seats. If Kadima surpassed Likud on election day as the biggest party, President Shimon Peres would likely ask Livni to form the next government.
About a quarter of Israel's 5.3 million eligible voters were undecided in the campaign's final days, polls said.
Even with a late victory, however, Livni would not be able to form a government without bringing hawks on board. That would put her in the same position she was in three months ago, when she failed to put together a coalition and triggered the current election by refusing to cave in to the right's demands after corruption charges forced Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to resign.
Specifically, it's unlikely Livni could put together a coalition without Avigdor Lieberman, a hawkish immigrant from the former Soviet Union who is emerging as the kingmaker in Tuesday's vote. His Yisrael Beitenu Party now appears to be vying with Barak's Labor to be Israel's third largest party.
Lieberman has based his campaign on denying citizenship to Arabs he considers disloyal — a position that gave rise to one of the campaign's most colorful TV ads, courtesy of the dovish Meretz Party: "If you liked Mussolini, if you were missing Stalin, you'll love Lieberman."
A victorious Netanyahu also could find himself forced into a broader coalition with doves if moderate parties did well enough.
But another possibility is that Netanyahu would team up with ultra-nationalists and Orthodox Jewish parties that oppose territorial concessions to the Palestinians — an outcome that would deal a big blow to U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace talks.
Netanyahu was recently quoted as saying he would allow existing Jewish settlements in the West Bank to expand.
He told a security conference Wednesday that any territory Israel relinquished to the Palestinians as part of a peace deal would be "grabbed by extremists." He said peace efforts should focus on building the Palestinian economy rather than creating an independent state — a position sure to be rejected by the Palestinians and most of the international community.
Those views are likely to put Netanyahu at odds with President Barack Obama, who has been reaching out to Muslims and promising fresh approaches to dealing with the Middle East, including moving forward vigorously with the vision of establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
"It is unfortunate if there is a positive political atmosphere in the U.S. and a negative political path in Israel," said Mohammed Shtayyeh, the head of a Palestinian economic development council.
The aftermath of the Gaza fighting could be another source of friction, especially if the Obama administration lends its support to an idea gaining currency in international circles of trying to pull the Islamic militants of Hamas out of Iran's orbit by offering incentives.
Palestinian leaders are attempting to repair the internal rift caused when Hamas violently seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007, leaving the Western-backed government of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in charge of just the West Bank.
The Obama team might well choose to accept a new Palestinian national unity government even if it included the militants, because Israeli-Palestinian peace would be all but impossible with Palestinians remaining divided.
While all the top Israeli candidates promise to be tough with Hamas, Netanyahu takes the hardest line. "There is no choice but to uproot the Iranian-backed regime in Gaza," he said Wednesday.
As for Iran itself, Netanyahu is vowing not to allow it to develop nuclear weapons, though he stops short of saying how he would achieve that. Of the main candidates, Netanyahu seems the most likely to carry out a military strike on Iran, which Israel sees as its top threat. That, too, could put him at odds with Obama, who favors talking to Tehran.
Still, Netanyahu showed a pragmatic side when he was prime minister from 1996 to 1999, meeting with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and ceding part of the biblically significant West Bank city of Hebron to Palestinian control.
Israeli hawks have carried out their nation's most important territorial concessions, most notably Menachem Begin's withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula in 1982 and Ariel Sharon's 2005 evacuation of Gaza.
One thing Israeli voters have never liked is disharmony with the U.S., their main international patron. This helps explain Obama's starring role in the election campaign, with Netanyahu bragging of his personal rapport with the new president and Livni repeatedly warning that voting for the right will harm U.S.-Israeli relations.
"I have heard that there are people who are afraid of Obama. I'm not," Barak said this week. "We can work very well together."
The idea of Palestinian statehood has not played a big role in the campaign, even though it is a crucial issue for Israelis. With Arabs soon to outnumber Jews in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, Israel will have a hard time remaining a Jewish state if it holds on to all the land it now controls.
Livni began pressing this point aggressively in recent days.
"The dove is on the window sill," said the candidate who wants to become Israel's second female prime minister after Golda Meir. "We can either slam the door or let it in. The choice is in your hands."
(They need a strong hand in Israel for that which has been prophesied)
JERUSALEM – Israel seems to be moving rightward going into Tuesday's national election, with polls giving the edge to former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a tough stance on Mideast peacemaking that could lead to a collision with the new U.S. administration.
Israel's complex coalition system and a large number of undecided voters could still allow Netanyahu's moderate rival, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, to squeeze out a victory.
But the war in Gaza, a looming recession and a pervasive belief that giving up land only draws more attacks have boosted Netanyahu and other hard-line candidates as Israelis prepare to choose a new 120-member parliament.
"How do I explain Israel's turn to the right?" asks analyst Reuven Hazan. "In three words: Hezbollah, Hamas and Iran."
The 23 days of fighting in the Gaza Strip last month appear to have nourished Israel's self image as a besieged nation surrounded by enemies — even though moderate candidates like Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak can claim political points for having helped wage the popular war. Both those candidates favor evacuating territory to make room for a Palestinian state.
But of all the contenders for prime minister, Netanyahu seems to best channel the current mood. The polished, baritone-voiced politician with flawless English sees confronting threats as the No. 1 priority rather than chasing an elusive peace deal with the Palestinians.
"Last time I voted for Barak and we tried to be nice to the Arabs and you see what we got," 37-year-old Jerusalem resident Elan Benaroush said, referring to the rocket attacks and Hamas takeover of Gaza that followed Israel's 2005 withdrawal from the territory. "We have to be strong. It's a security vote."
Opinion polls indicate that right-leaning parties together may garner a majority of about 65 seats in the next parliament, the Knesset.
But surveys also say the lead of Netanyahu's Likud Party over Livni's centrist Kadima Party has narrowed, with an edge of just two or three seats. If Kadima surpassed Likud on election day as the biggest party, President Shimon Peres would likely ask Livni to form the next government.
About a quarter of Israel's 5.3 million eligible voters were undecided in the campaign's final days, polls said.
Even with a late victory, however, Livni would not be able to form a government without bringing hawks on board. That would put her in the same position she was in three months ago, when she failed to put together a coalition and triggered the current election by refusing to cave in to the right's demands after corruption charges forced Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to resign.
Specifically, it's unlikely Livni could put together a coalition without Avigdor Lieberman, a hawkish immigrant from the former Soviet Union who is emerging as the kingmaker in Tuesday's vote. His Yisrael Beitenu Party now appears to be vying with Barak's Labor to be Israel's third largest party.
Lieberman has based his campaign on denying citizenship to Arabs he considers disloyal — a position that gave rise to one of the campaign's most colorful TV ads, courtesy of the dovish Meretz Party: "If you liked Mussolini, if you were missing Stalin, you'll love Lieberman."
A victorious Netanyahu also could find himself forced into a broader coalition with doves if moderate parties did well enough.
But another possibility is that Netanyahu would team up with ultra-nationalists and Orthodox Jewish parties that oppose territorial concessions to the Palestinians — an outcome that would deal a big blow to U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace talks.
Netanyahu was recently quoted as saying he would allow existing Jewish settlements in the West Bank to expand.
He told a security conference Wednesday that any territory Israel relinquished to the Palestinians as part of a peace deal would be "grabbed by extremists." He said peace efforts should focus on building the Palestinian economy rather than creating an independent state — a position sure to be rejected by the Palestinians and most of the international community.
Those views are likely to put Netanyahu at odds with President Barack Obama, who has been reaching out to Muslims and promising fresh approaches to dealing with the Middle East, including moving forward vigorously with the vision of establishing a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
"It is unfortunate if there is a positive political atmosphere in the U.S. and a negative political path in Israel," said Mohammed Shtayyeh, the head of a Palestinian economic development council.
The aftermath of the Gaza fighting could be another source of friction, especially if the Obama administration lends its support to an idea gaining currency in international circles of trying to pull the Islamic militants of Hamas out of Iran's orbit by offering incentives.
Palestinian leaders are attempting to repair the internal rift caused when Hamas violently seized control of the Gaza Strip in 2007, leaving the Western-backed government of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in charge of just the West Bank.
The Obama team might well choose to accept a new Palestinian national unity government even if it included the militants, because Israeli-Palestinian peace would be all but impossible with Palestinians remaining divided.
While all the top Israeli candidates promise to be tough with Hamas, Netanyahu takes the hardest line. "There is no choice but to uproot the Iranian-backed regime in Gaza," he said Wednesday.
As for Iran itself, Netanyahu is vowing not to allow it to develop nuclear weapons, though he stops short of saying how he would achieve that. Of the main candidates, Netanyahu seems the most likely to carry out a military strike on Iran, which Israel sees as its top threat. That, too, could put him at odds with Obama, who favors talking to Tehran.
Still, Netanyahu showed a pragmatic side when he was prime minister from 1996 to 1999, meeting with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and ceding part of the biblically significant West Bank city of Hebron to Palestinian control.
Israeli hawks have carried out their nation's most important territorial concessions, most notably Menachem Begin's withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula in 1982 and Ariel Sharon's 2005 evacuation of Gaza.
One thing Israeli voters have never liked is disharmony with the U.S., their main international patron. This helps explain Obama's starring role in the election campaign, with Netanyahu bragging of his personal rapport with the new president and Livni repeatedly warning that voting for the right will harm U.S.-Israeli relations.
"I have heard that there are people who are afraid of Obama. I'm not," Barak said this week. "We can work very well together."
The idea of Palestinian statehood has not played a big role in the campaign, even though it is a crucial issue for Israelis. With Arabs soon to outnumber Jews in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, Israel will have a hard time remaining a Jewish state if it holds on to all the land it now controls.
Livni began pressing this point aggressively in recent days.
"The dove is on the window sill," said the candidate who wants to become Israel's second female prime minister after Golda Meir. "We can either slam the door or let it in. The choice is in your hands."
(They need a strong hand in Israel for that which has been prophesied)