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Benjamin Netanyahu fought to the bitter end but lost by a single vote at the Knesset, Israel’s Parliament, as a new government with Naftali Bennett as Prime Minister was formed.
Israelis gathered in several cities and celebrated the ousting of a man who had been prime minister for 12 consecutive long years, even though his tenure was mired in several controversies including corruption charges. It took four elections in the last two years to get Netanyahu, finally, out of the door.
Papers headlined the news as the end of an era and speculated about the future of the state of Israel backed by the United States but encumbered with a historical conflict with the Palestinians.
Netanyahu was the son of an Israel-born mother and a Jewish father from Poland. His father adopted revisionist Zionism—a political ideology that propagates Israeli right over lands west of the Jordan river and is believed to have had shaped his ideas. Netanyahu rose in the ranks of power steadily since he became Israel’s deputy envoy to the US in 1982. He first won the election in 1996 and his first stint as Israel’s Prime Minister lasted until 1999. Later, he won consecutive terms in the polls in 2009, 2013, and 2015.
Netanyahu was widely seen as war averse but pro-Israeli settlements deep inside the West Bank—the area west of the Jordan river which was under Jordan’s control until the seven-day war in 1967. His policy was to keep occupying more and more Palestinian land, which he believed belonged to Israel, and manage pressure from the west on the other hand to forever delay a political resolution.
His relationship with President Obama was a trying one. Donald Trump, however, proved to be a godsend, a genie that kept granting all of his wishes. Trump not only made Iran the principal enemy of the US and walked out of the painstakingly struck US-Iran nuclear deal or the Joint Comprehensive Plan of ActionNetanyahu was widely seen as war averse but pro-Israeli settlements deep inside the West Bank—the area west of the Jordan river which was under Jordan’s control until the seven-day war in 1967. His policy was to keep occupying more and more Palestinian land, which he believed belonged to Israel, and manage pressure from the west on the other hand to forever delay a political resolution.
Netanyahu returned the gratitude in a retweet with a comment, as he did with at least one other leader. But experts say the coalition government in Israel is hanging by a thread and a leader like Netanyahu cannot yet be written off. Whilst it is unclear whether he will succeed in returning as Prime Minister anytime soon, this was certainly not the last we saw of him in the political arena. “We have a very strong opposition and we will work together to overthrow this fraudulent government very quickly,” Netanyahu tweeted soon after his defeat at the Knesset. “Do not let your spirit fall. We’ll be back—and faster than you think.”Experts say the coalition government in Israel is hanging by a thread and a leader like Netanyahu cannot yet be written off. Whilst it is unclear whether he will succeed in returning as Prime Minister anytime soon, this was certainly not the last we saw of him in the political arena.
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Anchal Vohra was a Fellow at ORF. She writes on contemporary developments in West Asia and on foreign policy.
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