Saturday, October 13, 2012

Not ambidextrous enough?

To form a government that pleases one and all, Netanyahu must discard some of his rigid ideologies

A whiff of fresh air is being experienced in Israel, after days of painful hostilities in the Gaza strip earlier this year. But apparently, the powers that be in Israel and the rest of the world are not too happy about these winds of change.

After Israeli President Shimon Peres invited Benjamin Netanyahu, the leader of the Likud party, to form the cabinet, the latter would be wondering if he was indeed the 'fortunate one'. Although he has been chosen, Netanyahu has six weeks to form his coalition government. And he needs a broader coalition to win international legitimacy. “We are all conscious that a right-wing religious alliance will put Netanyahu under pressure from the western nations, and he knows it as well. It’s not at all surprising that he is for a broad coalition,” Shmuel Sandler, an expert on the Israeli political system at Bar-Ilan university, told B&E.

However, all Netanyahu’s efforts to convince Kadima party head Tzipi Livni and Labour leader Ehud Barak to join his coalition have failed. One of the key reasons is his staunch, headstrong approach on contentious issues, like he seems to be rejecting the two state solution to resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict, which was endorsed by the world, including Israel itself in 2002.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.

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