Almost immediately after the recent
terrible incident in Rafah, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
spoke before the Knesset. His gestures were decisive and his face gaunt,
as it has been since Oct. 7.
His statement was pure Netanyahu. He
called the incident a “tragic mistake” and pledged an investigation.
Nonetheless, he gave an emphatic “no” to those who demand that Israel
stop its military operations in Rafah. Thus, he hit back at the
unilateral recognition of a nonexistent Palestinian state by Ireland,
Spain and Norway. He rebuffed the U.N., the E.U. and the various
persecutory international “courts.” He gave a strong riposte to the
likes of French President Emmanuel Macron and many others, along with
the media amen chorus, who have all been rushing to blame Netanyahu for
anything and everything.
Shortly after, of course, it became clear
that the fire that killed several dozen civilians in Rafah was the fault
of Hamas, which had stowed a cache of arms among the civilian
population—as it often does.
Netanyahu declared before the Knesset,
“Citizens of Israel, if you want weakness, despondency, surrender—listen
to the [media] studios. But if you want power, spirit and
victory—listen to the warriors. The goals of the war have not changed:
To be victorious over Hamas, return all the hostages, ensure that Gaza
won’t pose a threat to Israel and return the residents of the north
safely to their homes. These remain our objectives. If we surrender, we
won’t get all our hostages back. If we surrender, we will give a great
victory to terrorism, a great victory to Iran, to its axis of evil and
to all those seeking our destruction.”
This is a clear expression of Netanyahu’s
essential goal: To ensure Israel’s safety while observing the laws of
war. Indeed, even after the Rafah incident, the United States made it
clear that the requested civilian evacuations had been carried out,
along with the delivery of humanitarian aid. There is no justification
for the pressure put on Israel, organized for political reasons by the
United Nations and Europe. Let us not dismiss the likelihood that pure
racism is also a factor in this pressure.
Netanyahu knows all this. He also knows
that his goal is a personal one. He was prime minister when Israel
suffered its greatest disaster since 1948. Now he fights to restore
Israel’s security. This is a vital battle both for Israel and himself.
Whether he will seek to remain prime minister after the battle is an
open question.
No one who has read Netanyahu’s
autobiography should be surprised by his strong stance. He states that
his beliefs compel him to do everything possible to help Israel in its
quest to secure not only itself but the future of the Jewish people. He
learned from his childhood that this is the supreme value. His father
Benzion Netanyahu was a friend of Zionist leader Ze’ev Jabotinsky.
Benjamin has lived with the memory of his brother Yoni, who was killed
in the stunning 1976 hostage rescue operation in Entebbe.
Netanyahu and his brother Iddo have
followed in Yoni’s footsteps, both serving in Israel’s special forces
unit Sayeret Matkal. This legacy was never more apparent than in
Benjamin’s confrontations with President Barack Obama over Iran’s
nuclear ambitions. It was expressed as well in his efforts to secure
Israel’s economic future through technological innovation.
But today, he believes all this could be
lost if Hamas is not destroyed. So, he resists. He wants more Arab
nations to join the Abraham Accords. He earned the trust of many of them
through his staunch stance against Obama’s pro-Iran appeasement. He
knows that in the Middle East, weakness breeds war while strength
creates alliances and peace. He will never accept an Israel that is, as
Golda Meir said, a small country dependent on the opinion of others.
Nonetheless, Netanyahu is no fanatic. He
is a secular, very Jewish pragmatist. He has already said that even if
the religious parties in his coalition object, he does not intend to
occupy Gaza in perpetuity or rebuild the settlements dismantled 20 years
ago.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy famously told the Americans
after the Russian invasion, “I need ammunition, not a ride.” Netanyahu
needs ammunition, not affection. He’s used to criticism, even at home.
The Israeli people are split 50-50 in their views of him. Some love him
and some hate him. He is controversial and always has been. But at his
core, he is a fighter for the only ideal that matters: That the Jewish
people, like any other people, have the right to live in peace in their
homeland.
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