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 Struggle over Iran:  Tumultuous Israeli Politics Will Not Usher Peace
	   By Ramzy Baroud Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 15, 2012 
 Israel is currently experiencing the kind of turmoil that may 
	  or may not affect its political hierarchy following the next general 
	  election. However, there is little reason to believe that any major 
	  transformations in the Israeli political landscape could be of benefit to 
	  Palestinians.
 
 Former politicians and intelligence bosses have 
	  been challenging the conventional wisdom of right-wing Israeli Prime 
	  Minister Benjamin Netanyahu through a series of charged statements and 
	  political rhetoric.
 
 A few weeks ago it sounded rather like a 
	  political fluke when former chief of the Israeli Mossad, Meir Dagan called 
	  an attack on Iran “the stupidest thing I have ever heard.” His comment was 
	  then widely dismissed, but other voices have since joined the discussion. 
	   Yuval Diskin, former head of the Israeli internal intelligence, the Shin 
	  Bet, went even further, as he questioned the abilities of both Netanyahu 
	  and Barak, accusing them of promoting ‘messianic sentiments’ regarding 
	  Iran.
 
 “I saw them up close, they are not Messiahs...These are not 
	  people whose hands I would like to have on the steering- wheel,” he said. 
	  Dagan, who remains insistent on the ‘stupidity’ of the Israeli government, 
	  came to Diskin’s support. He told the New York Times on April 29 that “Diskin 
	  is a very serious man, a very talented man, he has a lot of experience in 
	  countering terrorism.”
 
 Netanyahu’s exaggeration of the supposed 
	  ‘existential danger’ posed by Iran’s nuclear program is clearly political 
	  – ultimately aimed at weakening another regional foe and appeasing his 
	  hard-line coalition. The invoking of holocaust analogies over a ‘threat’ 
	  that various international agencies have disputed, is a clear sign of the 
	  government’s political and moral bankruptcy.
 
 Awareness of 
	  Netanyahu’s ineptness is not confined to former heads of Israel’s 
	  intelligence, but the military itself. In a highly publicized interview in 
	  Haaretz in April, Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Benny Gantz disputed 
	  the government’s conventional wisdom – both by attesting to the 
	  rationality of Iranians leaders and discounting the very claim that Iran 
	  is on the road to manufacturing nuclear weapons. “Iran is going step by 
	  step to the place where it will be able to decide whether to manufacture a 
	  nuclear bomb. It hasn't yet decided whether to go the extra mile,” he 
	  said.
 
 The timing of this stream of focused criticism, emanating 
	  from some of Israel’s most decorated intelligence and army men, is not 
	  coincidental. Yes, there may be a major political upheaval underway 
	  regarding Iran, but considering the fact that Netanyahu still possesses 
	  the upper hand in Israeli politics, one must neither delve too far into 
	  optimism nor subsist in perpetual cynicism.
 
 In ‘Changing Course 
	  in Israel’ (Gulf News, May 4), Patrick Seale wrote, “The challenge to 
	  Netanyahu could have far-reaching consequences. For one thing, it appears 
	  to have removed any likelihood of an early Israeli attack on Iran, such as 
	  Netanyahu has threatened and trumpeted for a year and more; for another, 
	  it has revived the possibility of a two-state solution of the 
	  Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a solution many had thought moribund, if not 
	  actually dead.”
 
 It is difficult to ascertain whether the threat 
	  of war against Iran has been ‘removed’ based on statements made during an 
	  election season in Israel. Israeli politics is particularly known for its 
	  underhandedness, and parties vying for power understand that focusing 
	  their attack on Netanyahu is the only way to reinforce their candidate’s 
	  chances in the upcoming elections. This is not the first time that former 
	  heads of Israel’s intelligence and military have adopted such a charged 
	  position against a standing prime minister.
 
 Yet, regardless of 
	  the motive, the move against Netanyahu may be backfiring. According to a 
	  recent Haaretz poll, Netanyahu is ‘the clear favorite heading into 
	  Israel's upcoming elections.’ Yossi Verter wrote on May 5, “Netanyahu can 
	  rest easy after reading the results of the latest Haaretz-Dialog poll: Not 
	  only does he trounce all his rivals on the question of who is most fit to 
	  lead the country, but an absolute majority of Israelis reject the 
	  aspersions cast on him last week by former Shin Bet security service chief 
	  Yuval Diskin.”
 
 The poll indicates that the clearly coordinated 
	  statements regarding Iran are yet to shake Netanyahu’s throne. That said, 
	  such criticism could represent the start of political friction around 
	  Iran’s war. The friction could either move the next government further to 
	  the right or to the center. Until the nature of the next Israeli political 
	  formation becomes clearer, German commentator Ludwig Watzal is maybe 
	  closest to the right assessment. “The power struggle between Israel’s 
	  security establishments should tell the international public that an 
	  attack on Iran’s civilian nuclear program would be highly dangerous and 
	  politically irresponsible,” he wrote.
 
 Iran aside, what about 
	  other major maneuvers in Israeli politics preceding the probable elections 
	  few months from now? Tzipi Livni, former head of Israel's biggest 
	  opposition party, Kadima, has left the Knesset with a bang, although her 
	  resignation had been anticipated following her major defeat by challenger 
	  Shaul Mofaz in primary party elections last March. Once more, Livni 
	  assigned herself the role of the visionary, warning that Israel was 
	  sitting ‘on a volcano’. “The international clock is ticking and the 
	  existence of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state is in danger,” she 
	  suggested.
 
 Livni may have left the Knesset, but she has not left 
	  ‘political life.’ That declaration was enticing to the media which began 
	  speculating on what role Livni now sees for herself. According to the 
	  Haaretz poll, Mofaz, who defeated Livni, enjoys a minuscule approval 
	  rating of 6 percent.
 
 The frenzy of statements and political 
	  realignments preceding Israel’s elections are typical, and should not 
	  indicate major shifts in policies. Mistaking all of this to signal the 
	  return of the two state options is too hopeful, to say at least.
 
 The fact remains that Israel is unlikely to shift its aggressive policies 
	  from within. What is being promoted as the moral awakening, or political 
	  sensibility of some influential Israelis might merely be political 
	  maneuvers aimed at helping Israel find an exit strategy from delving 
	  further into war rhetoric. It could also be an attempt to challenge 
	  Netanyahu’s stronghold on Israeli politics. Quarreling within the ruling 
	  class in Israel during an election is almost a requirement. It neither 
	  ushers a new era of peace, nor does it signal a serious change from the 
	  constant saber-rattling against Iran.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud 
	  (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an 
	  internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	  PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom 
	  Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
     
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