Is Netanyahu planning a unilateral move?

[Martin Sherman has been warning about such a move for quite some time. Obviously if the “negotiations go nowhere, this is the Plan B. Ted Belman]

By David M. Weinberg, ISRAEL HAYOM

The music coming from the Prime Minister’s Office in recent weeks is anomalous. Prime Minister Netanyahu has been making uncharacteristically passionate statements about the diplomatic process; statements that go beyond the expected chatter about Israel’s desire to engage the Palestinians and negotiate a two-state solution.

One gets the sense that Netanyahu is desperate for diplomatic movement; that he has bought into the left-wing argument that the status quo is unsustainable; and that he is preparing to launch a unilateral Israeli initiative to concede significant parts of Judea and Samaria.

There is certainly a tremendous amount of international pressure on Netanyahu to do so. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s current effort to convene Israeli-Palestinian peace talks and bring about an agreement are unlikely to bear fruit. Even if Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas agrees to come to the table, in all likelihood the talks will falter or blow up quickly enough since Abbas is prepared to concede nothing.

Abbas rejects any further interim agreements with Israel. And even if Israel were to concede 99 percent of the West Bank, Abbas cannot sign an “end-of-conflict and end-of-demands” affirmation when the Gaza Strip is controlled by Hamas, nor will Abbas recognize Israel as a Jewish state. And Israel will not agree to any so-called “right of return” for Palestinian refugees and their descendants. So the chances of a permanent status agreement are zilch.

Nevertheless, international demands for Israeli action remain, and European threats of boycott and other isolating moves are increasing. The world wants to see proof of Israeli seriousness in the form of evacuation of settlements and other symbolic Israeli actions that denote withdrawal.

In this country, too, there is a groundswell of “elite” (read: leftist) opinion building in favor of unilateral Israeli moves in the West Bank — to signal to the Palestinians and the world that Israeli is serious about compromise; to show the world that Israel is not interested in “forever being an occupying power”; and to “help create conditions for the emergence of a stable two-state reality” sometime in the future.

Orni Petruschka, co-founder of the Israeli organization “Blue White Future,” which is backed by many people from the orbits of former prime ministers Barak and Olmert, laid out the plan this week.

Israel should “firmly put itself on an alternative path towards attaining its goal of two states,” he wrote in Haaretz, even without a comprehensive agreement with the Palestinians, by creating a “framework for two states.”

This “constructive unilateralism” as he calls it, has Netanyahu announcing, independent of any negotiations, that Israel has no sovereignty claims over areas east of the security barrier. Israel would then follow up this “constructive unilateral step in the international arena” with “constructive unilateral steps in the domestic arena” by enacting a voluntary evacuation and compensation law for those settlers who “prefer” to relocate to pre-1967 Israel following Israel’s renouncement of sovereignty in these areas. Eventually, Israel would plan for the absorption of all settlers currently residing east of the barrier, without coerced evacuation. The Israel Defense Forces, he says, would not withdraw from the territories until a real peace agreement is reached with the Palestinians.

Petruschka calls this smart bargaining, because it would, somehow and supposedly, “strengthen Israel’s negotiation position by demonstrating Israel’s willingness to take its destiny in its own hands”; it “would move Israel closer to its coveted prize of being a truly Jewish and democratic state, regardless of whether there is a Palestinian readiness to cooperate”; and it “will facilitate the resumption of negotiations and enhance the prospects for closing the deal and reaching the long-desired comprehensive agreement.”

Every single one of these statements is counterintuitive and demonstrably false. Israel’s negotiating position would be weakened, not strengthened, by such unilateral moves; and this plan would lead us away from peace, not closer to peace.

Unilateral Israeli action to redraw the map of settlement in Judea and Samaria will only encourage Palestinian maximalism. The Palestinians will learn to sit tight and remain intransigent, compromising on no issue, and simply wait for Israelis to tear themselves down and out of the West Bank completely.

But countering the quixotic “constructive unilateralism” platform is not the focus of this column. My focus, and the more relevant question, is: Why would Netanyahu be moving in this direction?

The answer lies mainly in domestic politics. Netanyahu has no other national agenda item to sustain his prime ministership. He needs a new message that will reposition him as a leader in the public mind, and the Palestinian issue is all he’s got to work with.

The lead on economic and social matters has been grabbed by Lapid and Bennett. There’s little Netanyahu can do about the hot situation in Syria or Iran. His job is to react wisely and cautiously to developments on these fronts, not lead Israel into confrontation.

Moreover, a plan for unilateral Israeli withdrawal of sorts would blow the Lapid-Bennett alliance out of the water — something which is Netanyahu’s highest political priority. The path to prying Brother Lapid away from Brother Bennett runs through Ramallah.

Netanyahu is also furious with the religious Zionist community for catapulting, as he sees it, arch hardliners who are thorns in Netanyahu’s side to the top of the Likud slate, and then “abandoning” the Likud in the recent elections in favor of Habayit Hayehudi. Lately, I sense a vindictive streak in Netanyahu’s attitude to the settlement community, and this, I fear, also plays into contemplation of a move against settlements.

With Bennett forced out of government and Lapid imprisoned inside it, Netanyahu could then move to bring the Labor Party and/or the haredi parties into his coalition — all of whom would readily back unilateral withdrawals in the West Bank (in exchange for sufficient amounts of budget allocations and patronage appointments).

In the process, Labor head Shelly Yachimovich would ward off serious challenges within her party to her leadership. Haredi leaders would wreak their revenge on Bennett and the national religious public for pushing the ultra-Orthodox out of the cabinet and threatening to draft yeshiva boys.

And Netanyahu would bask in the glow of praise of Washington and Tel Aviv elites. Lately, it seems that Netanyahu cares more about his global reputation than the opinions of the Likud rank and file.

It’s strange to hear Netanyahu adopting the terminology of the Zionist Left, warning, as he has done several times recently, about the danger of a binational state and the perils of international isolation. This tells me that he is under much more pressure than is evident to the public eye, and suggests to me that he is planning a surprise unilateral move.

Netanyahu should resist the temptation to buy fleeting international approval and purchase short-term domestic political gain by sacrificing the country’s long-term strategic needs and most fundamental diplomatic principles.

June 28, 2013 | 8 Comments »

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8 Comments / 8 Comments

  1. Would Bennett and Lapid give into BB manipulation? How can some one refuse precondition on one hand and give-up on the other hand. This is plain ABSURDITY. The more IL concedes for thin air the more the EU and the US will take advantage of her and request more concessions.
    For many in the West, Jews are trouble makers to dispense with.

  2. CuriousAmerican Said:

    Both sides want total victory, and consider anyone who has the slightest disagreement with them as an enemy.

    you appear to live outside the world of fact. Wasn’t there a recent discussion that the majority of Israelis seek a peace agreement with the PA which included giving them 90% of west bank? This is hardly the same as total victory or what occurs on the other side.

  3. CuriousAmerican Said:

    They see every new Jewish city as an erosion of Palestine.

    THERE IS NO CENTER IS THIS DEBATE.

    They see not only new Jewish cities as an erosion, they see all of Israel as an erosion.

    Why should there be a balance? There is no equality in claims or national positions. Power will determine the outcome, only Power and our national resolve to employ our power.

    I will leave the making of political and legal arguments to others. They are all worth shit in the final analysis. What counts is our willingness to drive them out because it’s necessary and because we can. If they could do it to us they would in an instant.

    There will yet come to power someone who shares my views and it will be done. Jews almost never do what’s right and necessary even in their own interests unless pushed to their limits, forcing them to act. I trust you christians and Arabs will force us to act sooner than later.

    You might brush up on the effects of a nuclear winter and what a few hundred well placed nukes can accomplish to that end. Just think of what a single EMP over Omaha can do? What tactical Neuron weapons can do?

    The USA has no real effective defense against a determined foe with such capabilities. They rely mostly on retaliatory overkill.

    Israels nuclear capability (speculative)

    More here

  4. @ CuriousAmerican:

    The only rights non Jews have in the land of Israel is Vassalage and Tribute.

    Not exactly Thomas Jefferson but it is the G-d of Israel.

    If you don’t like it, you can put in a complaint to he the issued the decree. 😉

  5. @ NormanF:
    I don’t see it happening – Israeli unilateral concessions will not end the conflict and will merely reinforce the Arab perception that the Jewish State is on the run and its international position is perilous.

    Okay, I see your point; but from their point of view, the PA is selling out to Israel.

    Look at this drawing which calls Abbas as bad as the Jewish pioneers in Judea and Samaria.
    http://commentisfreewatch.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/abbas.jpg?w=593

    You say Israel is doing nothing.

    They see every new Jewish city as an erosion of Palestine.

    THERE IS NO CENTER IS THIS DEBATE.

    Both sides want total victory, and consider anyone who has the slightest disagreement with them as an enemy.

  6. NormanF Said:

    Netanyahu is many things but he is no Begin or Sharon.

    Begin and Sharon were very popular with the general electorate and became even more so by giving up Land.

    BB is not popular, not trusted or respected by nearly the entire country. He will equal if not surpass both Begin and Sharon’s treasonous treachery if he believes he will not pay (for him), the ultimate political price.

    BB is PM today by default…No credible opposition in our out of his party.

    Leaders should be able to point to solid achievements accrued under his leadership. Thinking back over the past 4 1/2 years I can’t see a single positive thing Israel can directly attribute to BB as PM of Israel. To keep power he needs to virtually do nothing.

  7. I don’t see it happening – Israeli unilateral concessions will not end the conflict and will merely reinforce the Arab perception that the Jewish State is on the run and its international position is perilous. There are no benefits in Israel making itself more vulnerable merely to bask in international praise which will at best be temporary. Its precisely due to the lack of an Arab peace partner and the instability and the on-going turmoil in the Middle East precipitated by the rise of revolutionary Islam that now is not the time to change the status quo. And Netanyahu is many things but he is no Begin or Sharon.