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Benjamin
Netanyahu (1949- )
Israel's 9th Prime Minister, 1996-1999
Updated by Steven Klein November 2002
Benjamin Netanyahu was born in Tel Aviv in 1949, but he grew up in Jerusalem
and then moved with his family to the United States as a teenager. After
attending high school in Philadelphia, he returned to Israel and served
in an elite commando unit from 1967 to 1972, which engaged in anti-terrorist
activity and special missions. He studied architecture and business administration
at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, returning
to Israel to work in business. His appointment in 1982 as assistant ambassador
to Washington brought him back to the United States, and in 1984 he became
Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations.
In 1988 he was elected a Member of Knesset for the Likud Party and served
as deputy Foreign Minister and special assistant minister in the government,
playing a key role at the Madrid Conference of 1991. In 1993, following
the defeat of Yitzhak Shamir's Likud government in the previous year's
elections, Netanyahu decisively defeated three other candidates for Likud
party head. He remained leader of the opposition during the Rabin and
Peres governments. Following the assassination of Prime Minister Rabin
in 1995, Netanyahu was accused of abetting sedition and incitement against
the government, but refuted the allegations. He went on to oust Shimon
Peres as Prime Minister in the May 1996 elections and restore the Likud
to power. Netanyahu became not only the youngest Prime Minister but also
the first to be elected directly. In elections of May 1996, he narrowly
defeated then Prime Minister Shimon Peres, earning 50.5% of the vote to
Peres' 49.5%.
Netanyahu struggled through his three years in power, partly due to
lack of experience and partly due to the new system, which weakened the
two largest political parties in favor of smaller, socially-oriented factions.
Without a stable coalition, he was unable to take the country in one decisive
direction. Externally, relations with the Palestinians soured. He deferred
Israel's planned redeployment in Hebron and ignored Arafat for the first
few months, placating the right but aggravating the Left. The opening
of a tunnel door along the Western Wall into the Muslim Quarter in Jerusalem's
Old City triggered riots and fighting that left 15 Israelis and over 80
Palestinians dead. He then met with Arafat, signing the Hebron Accords.
By withdrawing from large parts of Hebron, he placated the Left but aggravated
the Right. He then dragged his feet between the spring of 1997 and the
fall of 1998, when Clinton pressured him into meeting Arafat again in
the US, where they signed the Wye River Memorandum, calling for Israel
to make three land transfers to the PA in return for security guarantees.
Demanding reciprocity, Netanyahu did not fulfill the agreement beyond
the first redeployment, and the peace process remained stagnant until
the government fell shortly thereafter.
Netanyahu, who had run a brilliant campaign to upset Peres in 1996,
could not repeat his magic in 1999. His opponent, Labor leader Ehud Barak,
took Netanyahu's practice of hiring spin-doctors hired his own PR team.
Though more experienced politically, Netanyahu could not compete with
Barak's image as a general and former chief-of-staff. He was roundly defeated
by Barak and resigned on election night in 1999. Netanyahu went into self-imposed
political exile, but from the day he left office he planned his eventual
return. His first opportunity came when the Barak government fell in 2001.
Although polls pegged him to defeat Likud leader Sharon for the top spot,
he refused to enter a race with the Knesset as fractured as it was. He
declared that he would only run for Prime Minister if he could lead Likud
back to the top, and not as a relatively small faction of 19 Knesset members.
When the National Unity government crumbled in the fall of 2002, Prime
Minister Sharon offered him the Foreign Affairs post to replace Shimon
Peres. However, Netanyahu responded that he would only take the post if
new elections were held. Sharon turned him down but offered the position
again a few days later when it became clear that he could not set up a
stable government, he dispersed the Knesset and invited Netanyahu to be
Minister of Foreign Affairs in the caretaker government. Now leading side-by-side,
the two would face each other for party leadership in December 2002.
One of Netanyahu's primary themes throughout his public career has been
the fight against terrorism. This concern originated with the 1976 Entebbe
raid, where Israeli troops successfully freed the hostages of a hijacked
Air France airplane held by Arab terrorists, but in which Netanyahu's
older brother, Yonatan, was killed. Netanyahu has repeatedly emphasized
the need to fight terror and to build peace upon security, both in his
policies and in his books. His resistance to relinquishing territory stems
more from belief in the prerequisite of strength for a successful peace
than from a "Greater Land of Israel" ideology. He is the author
of A Place Among the Nations (1995) and Fighting Terrorism (1996) and
the editor of Terrorism: How the West Can Win (1986).
Biography Links:
Knesset
http://www.knesset.gov.il/mk/eng/exmk_eng.asp?ID=90
Campaign website
http://netanyahu.org/biography.html
and http://netanyahu.org/biogheb.html
Wikipedia:
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Netanyahu
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