Benjamin Netanyahu

Benjamin Netanyahu
בנימין נתניהו
Benjamin Netanyahu

Leader of the Opposition
Incumbent
Assumed office 
20 December 2005

9th Prime Minister of Israel
In office
18 June 1996 – 6 July 1999
Preceded by Shimon Peres
Succeeded by Ehud Barak

Born 21 October 1949 (1949-10-21) (age 60)
Tel Aviv, Israel
Political party Likud

Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu (Hebrew: בִּנְיָמִין "ביבי" נְתַנְיָהוּ‎, Binyamin "Bibi" Netanyahu, born 21 October 1949, Tel Aviv) was the 9th Prime Minister of Israel and is Chairman of the Likud Party. As leader of the conservative Likud party, he was Prime Minister from June 1996 to July 1999. He is the first (and to date only) Prime Minister of Israel to be born after the State of Israel's foundation. He was Finance Minister of Israel until 9 August 2005, having resigned in protest at the Gaza Disengagement Plan advocated by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Netanyahu retook the Likud leadership on 20 December 2005. As of December 2006, he became the official leader of the Opposition in the Knesset and Chairman of the Likud Party. In August 2007 he retained the Likud leadership by beating Moshe Feiglin in party elections.

Contents

Family and personal background

Netanyahu was born in Tel Aviv, to Cela (Tsilah) (née Segal) and Benzion Netanyahu (original name Mileikowsky). His mother was also born in 1912 in Petach Tikvah in what would become Israel. Though all his grandparents were born in Lithuania, his mother's parents immigrated from Minneapolis, in the US.[1] Netanyahu's father (Benzion Netanyahu) is a professor of Jewish history, currently listed as a professor emeritus at Cornell University although the elder Netanyahu has remained active into his 90s in research and writing, a former editor of the Hebrew Encyclopedia, and a former senior aide to Zeev Jabotinsky. When he was 14 years old, his family moved to the United States and settled in Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania, a Philadelphia suburb, where he graduated from Cheltenham High School. Netanyahu's older brother Yonatan was killed in Uganda during Operation Entebbe in 1976. His younger brother Iddo is a radiologist and writer. All three brothers served in the Sayeret Matkal reconnaissance unit, Benjamin Netanyahu from 1967 to 1972. He earned a B.S. degree in Architecture from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1975, and an M.S. degree from the MIT Sloan School of Management in 1977, and has studied political science at Harvard and MIT. After graduate school, Netanyahu worked at The Boston Consulting Group in Boston, Massachusetts, and eventually returned to Israel. He has authored several books, including two on fighting terrorism. Netanyahu has a daughter, Noa, from his first marriage to Micki Weizman. His second marriage was to Fleur Cates, who converted to Judaism (only her father was a Jew). He is now married to his third wife, Sarah, with whom he has two sons, Yair and Avner.

After a brief career in business, Netanyahu was appointed Deputy Chief of Mission at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C. in 1982. Subsequently, he became Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations, serving from 1984 to 1988. He was elected to the Knesset in 1988 and served in the governments led by Yitzhak Shamir from 1988 to 1992. Shamir retired from politics shortly after Likud's defeat in the 1992 elections. In 1993, for the first time, the party held a primary election to select its leader, and Netanyahu was victorious, defeating Benny Begin, son of the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin, and veteran politician David Levy. (Ariel Sharon initially sought the Likud leadership as well, but quickly withdrew when it was evident that he was attracting minimal support.)

Prime minister (1996-1999)

In 1996, for the first time, Israelis elected their Prime Minister directly. Netanyahu hired American Republican political operative Arthur Finkelstein to run his campaign, and although the American style of sound bites and sharp attacks elicited harsh criticism from inside Israel, it proved effective (ironically, the method was later copied by Ehud Barak during the 1999 election campaign in which he beat Netanyahu). Netanyahu won the election, surprising many by beating the pre-election favourite Shimon Peres. The main catalyst in the downfall of the latter was a wave of suicide bombings shortly before the elections; on 3 March and 4, 1996, Palestinians carried out two suicide bombings, killing 32 Israelis, with Peres seemingly unable to stop the attacks. Unlike Peres, Netanyahu did not trust Yasser Arafat and conditioned any progress at the peace process on the Palestinian Authority fulfilling its obligations - mainly fighting terrorism, and ran with the campaign slogan "Netanyahu - making a safe peace". However, although Netanyahu won the election for Prime Minister, Labor won the Knesset elections, beating the Likud-Gesher-Tzomet alliance, meaning Netanyahu had to rely on a coalition with the Ultra-orthodox parties, Shas and UTJ (whose social welfare policies flew in the face of his capitalistic outlook) in order to govern.

Netanyahu with Yasser Arafat and Nabil Shaath at the World Economic Forum in Davos, 1997

As Prime Minister, Netanyahu negotiated with Yasser Arafat in the form of the Wye River Accords (1998). No progress was made regarding negotiations with the Palestinians, and although they failed to implement agreed-upon steps of the Oslo Accords, Netanyahu turned over most of Hebron to Palestinian jurisdiction. In 1996, Netanyahu and Jerusalem's mayor Ehud Olmert decided to open an exit for the Western Wall Tunnel. This sparked three days of rioting by Palestinians, resulting in both Israelis and Palestinians being killed.

As Prime Minister Netanyahu emphasized a policy of "three no(s)": no withdrawal from Golan Heights, no discussion of the case of Jerusalem, no negotiations under any preconditions.[2]

Netanyahu was opposed by the political left wing in Israel and also lost support from the right because of his concessions to the Palestinians in Hebron and elsewhere, and due to his negotiations with Arafat generally. After a long chain of scandals (including gossip regarding his marriage) and an investigation opened against him on charges of corruption (later acquitted), Netanyahu lost favor with the Israeli public.

After being defeated by Ehud Barak in the 1999 election for Prime Minister, Netanyahu temporarily retired from politics.

Political activity after 2000

In 2001, Netanyahu missed the opportunity to return to power since he refused to run unless there were general elections, a move that facilitated Sharon's entry into the race for Prime Minister.

In 2002, after the Labour Party left the coalition and vacated the position of foreign minister, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon appointed Netanyahu as Foreign Minister. Netanyahu challenged Sharon for the leadership of the Likud party, but failed to oust Sharon.

Finance Minister, 2003-2005

After the 2003 elections, Netanyahu accepted the post of Finance Minister in a newly formed Sharon coalition. Netanyahu did not support the concept of a future Palestinian state, though on two occasions in 2001, he indicated willingness to consider the idea.[3]

As Finance Minister, Netanyahu undertook an economic plan in order to restore Israel's economy from its low point during the al-Aqsa Intifada. The plan involved a move toward more liberalized markets, although it was not without its critics. Netanyahu succeeded in passing several long-in-the-queue reforms, including an important reform in the banking system that followed with a significant increase in the GDP growth rate. However, opponents in the Labor party (and a few even with his own Likud) viewed Netanyahu's policies as "Thatcherite" attacks on the venerated Israeli social safety net. Likud's defeat in the 2006 elections is seen by many observers as a collective Israeli rejection of these policies.

Netanyahu threatened to resign in 2004 unless the Gaza pullout plan was put to a referendum, but later lifted the ultimatum. He submitted his resignation letter on 7 August 2005, shortly before the Israeli cabinet voted 17 to 5 to approve the initial phase of withdrawals of the Gaza Disengagement Plan. Netanyahu's resignation went into effect 9 August 2005, two days after he submitted his letter. Shortly thereafter he revealed he had rejected an invitation to serve as Italy's finance minister, allegedly extended to him by Italian billionaire businessman Carlo De Benedetti, who later said it was a joke.

Party leader, Likud

Following the withdrawal of Ariel Sharon from the Likud, Netanyahu was one of several candidates who vied for the Likud leadership. His most recent attempt prior to this was in September 2005 when he tried to hold early primaries for the position of the head of the Likud party, while the party held the office of Prime Minister - thus effectively pushing Ariel Sharon out of office. The party rejected this initiative. Netanyahu retook the leadership on 20 December 2005, with 47% of the primary vote. In the March 2006 Knesset elections, Likud took the third place behind Kadima and Labor. Netanyahu is currently Leader of the Opposition.

On 14 August 2007, Netanyahu was reelected as chairman of the Likud and its candidate to the post of Prime Minister with 73% of the vote against far-right candidate Moshe Feiglin and World Likud Chairman Danny Danon.

On 31 July 2008, Netanyahu, as Likud party leader, called for snap polls, since Ehud Olmert's successor as Kadima leader would not automatically be the prime minister: "This government has reached an end ... it doesn't matter who heads Kadima. They are all partners in this government's total failure. National responsibility requires a return to the people and new elections."[4] Israeli law requires dissolution of the current government and formation of a coalition by the new leader before taking over. Olmert plans to be a caretaker until formation of new government.[5]

As party leader, Netanyahu would automatically be the Likud's candidate for Prime Minister in the next Israeli parliamentary election. This is currently planned for early 2009, as Tzipi Livni, the current Acting Prime Minister, has declared that she is unable to form a viable governing coalition. Aiming to learn from the success of others, Netanyahu's campaign website is strongly reflective of the one used just recently by President-elect of the United States Barack Obama to reach his supporters, including colors, fonts, icons, the use of embedded video, and social networking options such as Twitter.[6]

Response to Iran

Strongly against Iran's pursuit of uranium enrichment, Netanyahu said "[i]t’s 1938, and Iran is Germany, and Iran is racing to arm itself with atomic bombs”.[7][8] In a 8 March 2007 interview with CNN, he asserted that there is only one difference between Nazi Germany and the Islamic Republic of Iran, namely that the first entered a worldwide conflict and then sought atomic weapons, while the latter is first seeking atomic weapons and, once it has them, will then start a world war.

Netanyahu repeated these remarks at a news conference in April, 2008, stating that "where that [Nazi] regime embarked on a global conflict before it developed nuclear weapons," he said. "This regime [Iran] is developing nuclear weapons before it embarks on a global conflict."[9]

Books and articles

Books:

Articles:

References

  1. Ronn, Michoel, The Dworskys of Lazdei: The History of a Lithuanian Jewish family from the mid-1700s until the Present, Brooklyn, NY 1900
  2. Hawas, Akram T. The new alliance: Turkey and Israel. The fourth Nordic conference on Middle Eastern Studies: The Middle East in globalizing world. Oslo, 13-16 August 1998.
  3. Likud Central Committee rejects Palestinian state Haaretz, 13 May 2002
  4. guardian.co.uk, Netanyahu calls for new Israeli elections
  5. news.bbc.co.uk, Snap poll call as Olmert departs
  6. Bronner, Ethan; Cohen, N. (November 14, 2008). "In Israel, 'Yes we can, too'", International Herald Tribune. Retrieved on 2008-11-15. 
  7. "Netanyahu: Iran Preparing Another Holocaust" Newsmax.com, 16 November 2006. Accessed 1 November 2007
  8. Iran the next Nazi Germany Video of 13 November 2006 address in Los Angeles. Accessed 1 November 2007
  9. Report: Netanyahu says 9/11 terror attacks good for Israel, Haaretz, 16 April 2008.

External links

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Yehuda Blum
Israeli Ambassador to the UN
1984-1988
Succeeded by
Johanan Bein
Political offices
Preceded by
Yitzhak Shamir
Leader of the Likud Party
1993–1999
Succeeded by
Ariel Sharon
Preceded by
Ariel Sharon
Leader of the Likud Party (2nd Time)
2005–Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
Persondata
NAME Netanyahu, Benjamin
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Milkowsky, Benjamin; Bibi
SHORT DESCRIPTION Prime Minister of Israel
DATE OF BIRTH 21 October 1949
PLACE OF BIRTH Tel Aviv, Israel
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH