Netanyahu becomes Israel's longest-serving Prime Minister

Published Jul 18, 2019

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Jerusalem - Benjamin Netanyahu makes

history this weekend by becoming the longest-serving Israeli

prime minister, surpassing a record held by the country's

founding father David Ben-Gurion.

Yet the conservative leader, who will match Ben-Gurion's

8,475 days in office on Friday, is limping across that line,

facing an election in September after an inconclusive April

ballot, and a possible corruption trial.

"Who's counting?" he said airily when asked about the career

milestone during a conference hosted by the sympathetic Israel

Hayom newspaper and attended by U.S. envoys.

To judge from his solid approval ratings, Netanyahu, 69, has

delivered what Israelis wants: a purring economy and relative

security despite the collapse of peacemaking with the

Palestinians and combustible fronts with Syria and Lebanon.

He has also rallied a rising Israeli right-wing with

rhetoric against the country's Arab minority, and cut down

potential political challengers with divide-and-conquer tactics.

Netanyahu became Israel's youngest-ever premier in 1996,

serving until his defeat in a 1999 election. Re-elected in 2009,

he extended his tenure through the ballot box in 2013 and 2015.

But in a surprise turn, he failed to form a new coalition

government after claiming victory in an election three months

ago, and now serves as a caretaker prime minister.

That means a do-over in September, just weeks before

prosecutors are expected to decide whether to indict Netanyahu

in three graft cases, which he has castigated as a witch-hunt.

STATECRAFT

Netanyahu has scored a string of statecraft goals with the

help of President Donald Trump: U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as

Israel's capital and of Israeli sovereignty over the occupied

Golan Heights, as well as Washington's withdrawal from world

powers' 2015 nuclear deal with Israel's arch regional foe Iran.

He may be one of the few world leaders who can boast a

rapport with both Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

And to the delight of Jewish settlers in the occupied West

Bank, he has sidestepped the Palestinians with outreach to Arab

Sunni Muslim rulers who share his concerns over Iran.

Israel's centre-left opposition, and many of its foreign

friends, worry, however, that Netanyahu has missed a chance to

find a two-state deal with the Palestinians to safeguard the

Jewish majority and democratic credentials of his country.

Tom Segev, an Israeli historian, said that while Netanyahu's

political longevity might be seen as a success story, "it may

also be that...we will remember him more for leading Israel down

the road to more oppression of the Palestinians".

Dore Gold, a veteran Netanyahu envoy who now heads the

Jerusalem Center of Public Affairs think-tank, described the

U.S.-educated premier as influenced by his late father, Benzion

Netanyahu, a scholar of Jewish persecution during the Spanish

Inquisition.

"I think he sees himself as someone who will do whatever is

possible, anything in his power, to protect his people from any

future disaster," Gold said in summarising Netanyahu's legacy.

Netanyahu's political strategy has included emulating Trump

in blunt social media attacks on his rivals that have underlined

deep divisions within Israel society.

Much like Ben-Gurion, Netanyahu has doubled as defence

minister and bolstered the military as part of an uncompromising

distrust of Israel's neighbours and a doctrine of self-reliance.

But the two leaders cut two very different figures.

Plain-spoken and diminutive, the Polish-born Ben-Gurion

stepped down as collectivist prime minister in 1963, aged 76,

and retired to a spartan desert hut. The telegenic,

English-fluent Netanyahu is a free-market champion who favours

cigars and American sports tropes, and keeps a beachfront villa. 

Reuters

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