Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January/February
1999, page 31
Special Report
Deception Is Binyamin Netanyahus Modus
Operandi
By Neve Gordon
Perhaps its naïveté, but I still
have faith in President Lincolns claim that you can fool all
the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time,
but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. Could it
be then that Israels Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu has proven
Lincoln wrong?
Not a week passes without the Israeli press disclosing
new evidence of the prime ministers deceit and duplicity.
Upon his return from Wye Mills, Netanyahu notified the public that
his was a better agreement than the one initiated by the late Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Rabin, Bibi said, promised the Palestinians
92 percent of the West Bank; I gave them much less.
How did Bibi come up with 92 percent? According to
the former head of the Mossad (Israels intelligence service),
this figure is a chimera of the prime ministers imagination.
Leah Rabin agrees. During a protest commemorating the third anniversary
of her husbands assassination, she proclaimed that Bibi is
a liar who is cynically exploiting the fact that Rabin can no longer
reply.
A few days later when the Wye memorandum was finally
distributed among cabinet and Knesset members, it became clear that
there were substantial differences between the Hebrew version and
the authentic English agreement. Bibi, it turns out, had his assistant,
Danny Naveh, add numerous clauses to the Hebrew document. Since
most Israelis read English, and read it fairly well, this machination
was also detected.
Netanyahus deception is not confined to issues
relating to the Palestinian question. A number of months ago he
appeared on TV and stated that Israel must continue to develop its
high-tech industry by encouraging the use of personal computers
in every household. Thus, the prime minister continued, I
have decided to repeal all computer taxes. Leave it up to
Bibi to repeal a tax that had already been repealed by his predecessor
years before.
Deception also characterizes Netanyahus response
to Israels increasing unemployment rate. Since he entered
office two and a half years ago, national unemployment figures have
risen by almost 4 percent, and are now just shy of 10 percent. In
Ofakim, a town in Israels southern desert, the unemployment
rate is in the high teens. In January 1998, Netanyahu visited Ofakim
and promised the residents that he would fight the high level of
unemployment. To prove that his intentions were good, he vowed to
create 300 new jobs within a month. Almost a year has passed and
Ofakim still tops the unemployment charts; the 300 jobs have yet
to materialize.
While many politicians deceive, only a few have made
it into a modus operandi. Opposition and coalition members,
cabinet ministers, and even Netanyahus closest aides have
publicly stated that they do not trust their leader. Beyond the
damage he has done to the peace process and to Israels economy,
which is entering its second year of recession, Netanyahu has introduced
the culture of mendacity into the Israeli political arena. One need
only examine recent history to realize that the most dangerous regimes
evolve in countries where leaders lie without shame. A shameless
leader is a leader who can commit atrocities.
Netanyahu, for me, serves as a litmus test. If he
remains in office for his full four-year term, I will have to concede
that one can fool all of the people all of the time and that Lincoln
was wrong. In the meantime I am following the prime ministers
actions closely, longing to write a column entitled Bye Bye
Bibi Bye Bye.
Neve Gordon,
an Israeli peace activist who lives in Jerusalem, is completing his
Ph.D. in political science at the University of Notre Dame. His book,
Torture: Human Rights, Medical Ethics and the Case of Israel,
is available from the AET
Book Club. |