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           |  | Lieberman Maybe the Winner of Coming Israeli 
	Elections
 
 By Uri Avnery
 
 Gush Shalom, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 10, 2012                                    Cold Revenge 
 “REVENGE is a dish that is best 
	eaten cold,” is a saying attributed to Stalin. I don’t know if he really 
	said that. All the possible witnesses were executed long ago.
 
 Anyhow, a taste for delayed revenge is not an Israeli trait. Israelis are 
	more impulsive. More immediate. They don’t plan. They improvise.
 
 In 
	this respect, too, Avigdor Lieberman is not Israeli. He is Russian.
 
 WHEN “EVET”, as he is called in Russian, selected his Knesset faction four 
	years ago, he acted, as always, according to his mood of the moment.
 No nonsense about democracy, primaries and such. There is a leader, and 
	the leader decides.
 There was this very beautiful young woman from 
	St. Petersburg, Anastassia Michaeli. Not very bright, perhaps, but good to 
	look at during boring Knesset sessions.
 
 Then there was this nice 
	man with the very Russian name, Stas Misezhnikov, which no Israeli can 
	pronounce. He is popular among the Russian immigrants. Davay, let’s take 
	him.
 
 And this Israeli diplomat, Danny Ayalon, may be useful if I 
	become Foreign Secretary.
 
 But moods pass, and people 
	elected stay elected for four years.
 
 The beauty turned out to be a 
	bully, in addition to being stupid. In a public Knesset committee meeting, 
	she stood up and poured a glass of water over an Arab member. On another 
	occasion, she physically attacked a female Arab member on the Knesset 
	rostrum.
 
 The nice Russian man was rather too nice. He regularly got 
	drunk and organized parties for his mistress abroad, expenses paid by his 
	ministry. Even his bodyguards complained.
 
 And the diplomat trumped 
	the lot, when he invited journalists to witness his humiliation of the 
	Turkish ambassador, putting him on a very low seat during a meeting. This 
	led on to the famous Turkish Flotilla incident and did – is still doing - 
	incalculable damage to Israel’s strategic interests. Also, Ayalon was a 
	compulsive leaker.
 
 Lieberman did not react to all this. He defended 
	his people and criticized their critics, who were anyhow leftist trash.
 
 But now has come the time to appoint Lieberman’s faction to the next 
	Knesset, again without democratic nonsense. To their utter consternation, 
	the three were dismissed with five minutes’ notice. All without any display 
	of emotion. Cold. Cold.
 
 Don’t mess with the likes of Lieberman. Any 
	more than with Vladimir Putin and Co.
 
 IF I were Binyamin 
	Netanyahu, I would not worry about Abbas, Ahmadinejad, Obama, Morsi and the 
	combined opposition in the Knesset. All I would worry about would be 
	Lieberman, somewhere behind my back. I would worry very, very much. Every 
	minute, every second.
 
 Two weeks ago, two fateful things happened 
	that may hasten the political demise of “King Bibi”. One was not of his 
	making, the other was.
 
 In the Likud primaries, dominated by ugly 
	deal-making and manipulations, a new Knesset faction was selected that was 
	almost exclusively composed of extreme rightists, including outright 
	fascists, many of them settlers and their appointees. Against Netanyahu’s 
	wishes, all the moderate rightists were unceremoniously booted out.
 
 Netanyahu is, of course, an extreme rightist himself. But he likes 
	to pose as a moderate, responsible, mature statesman. The moderates served 
	as his alibi.
 
 The new Likud has nothing to do with the original 
	“revisionist” party that was its forerunner. The founder of the party some 
	85 years ago, Vladimir  (Ze’ev) Jabotinsky, an Odessa-born and 
	Italian-educated journalist and poet, was an extreme nationalist and very 
	liberal democrat. He invented a special Hebrew word (“Hadar”) for the ideal 
	Jew he envisioned: just, honest, decent, a hard fighter for his ideals but 
	also magnanimous and generous towards his adversaries.
 
 If Jabotinsky 
	could view his latest heirs, he would be revolted. (He once advised Menachem 
	Begin, one of his pupils, to jump into the river Vistula if he did not 
	believe in the conscience of mankind.)
 
 JUST BEFORE the Likud 
	primaries, Netanyahu did something incredible: he made an agreement with 
	Lieberman to combine their two election lists.
 
 Why? His election 
	victory already seemed assured. But Netanyahu is a compulsive tactician 
	without a strategy. He is also a coward. He wants to play safe. With 
	Lieberman, his majority is as sound as Fort Knox.
 
 But what is going 
	to happen within the fortress?
 
 Lieberman, now No. 2, will pick for 
	himself the most important and powerful ministry: defense. He will wait 
	patiently, like a hunter for his prey. The joint faction will be much closer 
	in spirit to Lieberman than to Netanyahu. Lieberman, the cold calculator, 
	will wait until Netanyahu is compelled by international pressure to make 
	some concessions to the Palestinians. Then he will pounce.
 
 This week 
	we saw the prelude. After the UN overwhelmingly recognized Palestine as a 
	state, Netanyahu “retaliated” by announcing his plan to build 3000 new homes 
	in the occupied Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem, the 
	inevitable future capital of Palestine.
 
 He emphasized his 
	determination to fill up the area called E1, the still empty space between 
	West Jerusalem and the giant settlement of Ma’aleh Adumim (which alone has a 
	municipal area larger than Tel Aviv). This would in effect cut off the 
	northern West Bank from the southern part, apart from a narrow bottleneck 
	near Jericho.
 
 World reaction was stronger than ever 
	before. Undoubtedly encouraged behind the scenes by President Obama, the 
	European countries summoned Lieberman’s ambassadors to protest the move. 
	(Obama himself is far too cowardly to do so himself.) Angela Merkel, usually 
	a mat under Netanyahu’s feet, warned him that Israel risked being totally 
	isolated.
 
 If Merkel thinks that this would intimidate 
	Netanyahu or the Israelis at large, she is vastly mistaken. Israelis 
	actually welcome isolation. Not because it is “splendid”, as the British 
	used to think, but because it confirms again that the entire world is 
	anti-Semitic, and not to be trusted. So, to hell with them.
 
 WHAT 
	ABOUT the other parties? I almost asked: what parties?
 
 In Israeli 
	politics, with their dozens of parties, what really count are the two blocs: 
	the rightist-religious and the…well, the other one.
 
 There is no 
	“leftist” bloc in Israel. Leftism is now, like Oscar Wilde’s homosexuality, 
	“the love that dares not speak its name”. Instead, everybody claims now to 
	be “in the center”.
 
 A seemingly small matter aroused much attention 
	this week. Shelly Yachimovich’s Labor party has terminated its long-standing 
	“spare votes” agreement with Meretz, and made a new one with Ya’ir Lapid’s 
	“There is a Future”.
 
 In the Israeli electoral system, which is 
	strictly proportional, great care is taken that no vote is wasted. 
	Therefore, two election lists can make a deal in advance to combine the 
	leftover votes that remain to them after the allocation of the seats, so 
	that one of them can obtain another. In certain situations, this additional 
	seat can be decisive in the final division between the two major blocs.
 
 Labor and Meretz had a natural alliance. Both were socialist. You could vote 
	for Labor and still be satisfied that your vote may end up helping another 
	Meretz member to get elected. Displacing this arrangement with one with 
	another party is meaningful – especially if the other is a hollow list, 
	devoid of serious ideas, eager to join Netanyahu’s government.
 
 By 
	representing nothing but the personal charm of Lapid, this party may garner 
	some eight seats. The same goes for Tzipi Livni’s brand-new “the Movement”, 
	cobbled together at the last moment.
 
 Meretz is a loyal old party, 
	saying all the right things, unblemished by corruption. Unfortunately it has 
	the lackluster charisma of an old kettle. No exciting new faces, in an age 
	where faces count more than ideas.
 
 The communists are considered an 
	“Arab” party, though they do have a Jewish candidate. Like the other two 
	“Arab” parties, they have little clout, especially since about half the Arab 
	citizens don’t vote at all, out of indifference or disgust.
 
 That 
	leaves Labor. Yachimovich has succeeded in raising her party from the 
	half-dead and imbued it with new life. Fresh new faces enliven the election 
	list, though some of the candidates don’t speak with each other. In the last 
	few hours, Amir Peretz, the former Minister of Defense, left Shelly for 
	Tzipi.
 
 But is this the new opposition? Not if it concerns little 
	matters like peace (a word not to be mentioned), the huge military budget 
	(ditto), the occupation, the settlers ( Shelly likes them), the Orthodox ( 
	Shelly likes them, too). Under pressure, Shelly concedes that she is “for 
	the two-state solution”, but in today’s Israel that means next to nothing. 
	More importantly, she categorically refuses to undertake not to join a 
	Netanyahu-Lieberman coalition.
 
 It may well turn out that the victor of the 
	elections, six weeks from now, will be Avigdor Lieberman, the man of 
	the cold revenge. And that will be the beginning of a new chapter 
	altogether.
 
 
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